Communication For Nurses
Communication For Nurses
Communication For Nurses
for
Nurses
Communication
for
Nurses
F. A. Davis Company 1915 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 www.fadavis.com Copyright 2010 by F. A. Davis Company. All rights reserved. This book is protected by copyright. No part of it may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. Printed in the United States of America Last digit indicates print number: 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Senior Acquisitions Editor: Thomas A. Ciavarella Director of Content Development: Darlene D. Pedersen Project Editor: Meghan K. Ziegler Assistant Editor: Maria Z. Price Manager of Design and Illustration: Carolyn OBrien As new scientic information becomes available through basic and clinical research, recommended treatments and drug therapies undergo changes. The author(s) and publisher have done everything possible to make this book accurate, up to date, and in accord with accepted standards at the time of publication. The author(s), editors, and publisher are not responsible for errors or omissions or for consequences from application of the book, and make no warranty, expressed or implied, in regard to the contents of the book. Any practice described in this book should be applied by the reader in accordance with professional standards of care used in regard to the unique circumstances that may apply in each situation. The reader is advised always to check product information (package inserts) for changes and new information regarding dose and contraindications before administering any drug. Caution is especially urged when using new or infrequently ordered drugs. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Schuster, Pamela McHugh, 1953Communication for nurses : how to prevent harmful events and promote patient safety / Pamela McHugh Schuster, Linda Nykolyn. p.; cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8036-2080-3 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Communication in nursing. 2. Nurse and patient. 3. Medical errorsPrevention. I. Nykolyn, Linda. II. Title. [DNLM: 1. Nurse-Patient Relations. 2. Communication. 3. Medical Errorsprevention & control. 4. Patient Care Management. 5. Safety Management. WY 87 S395ca 2010] RT23.S38 2010 610.730699dc22 2009044439 Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use, or the internal or personal use of specic clients, is granted by F. A. Davis Company for users registered with the Copyright Clearance Center (CCC) Transactional Reporting Service, provided that the fee of $.25 per copy is paid directly to CCC, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923. For those organizations that have been granted a photocopy license by CCC, a separate system of payment has been arranged. The fee code for users of the Transactional Reporting Service is: 8036-2080-2/10 0 + $.25.
This book is dedicated to nurses, nursing students, and nursing faculty, who comprise the largest discipline within the health-care workforce and must keep themselves updated on the development of the latest patient-safe communication strategies to prevent harmful events to patients. This book is also dedicated to our families, colleagues, and friends who have supported us throughout our efforts in developing this book. Pamela McHugh Schuster
This book is dedicated to my mother Sophie, the kindest and most caring person I have ever known; and to my siblings, friends, colleagues, staff, and everyone from F.A. Davis who provided me with support and encouragement every step of the way! Linda Nykolyn
Preface
he purpose of this book is to guide the development of comprehensive professional communication strategies in nursing students to prevent communication errors that result in patient injuries and death. In 2000, the Institute of Medicine reported in To Err is Human that harmful events result in 48,000 to 98,000 deaths per year, in minutes, that amounts to 1 death every 510 minutes. Health-care leaders all over the world were stunned. Few could believe what they were reading. Over the past 9 years continued analysis of harmful events by the Joint Commission in the United States led to the conclusion that communication errors are the root cause of 70% of sentinel events in healthcare settings. In recent years, accrediting agencies in the United States and Canada and the World Health Organization have developed goals and strategies to improve the effectiveness of communication among caregivers. In this book, we consider communication to be the key instrument used by nurses and all health-care providers for ensuring patient safety. Health-care providers use communication in all aspects of patient care, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. If communications fail at any point, the failure can lead to patient harm. Unfortunately, we cannot prevent all harmful events to patients in health-care settings; but there are many ways to decrease the frequency of serious patient injuries and deaths due to misinterpretations and gaps in communication. To use communication as a patient safety instrument, you need expertise and knowledge of: The basic fundamentals of patient-safe communication in developing interpersonal relationships How to use patient-safe communication to establish effective nurse-patient relationships to ensure active participation of the patient and family in planning, implementing, and evaluating plans of care, and How to use patient-safe communication when collaborating with other members of the health-care team. To assist students with attaining this expertise and knowledge, we have developed this book and Web-based ancillaries in three units. The rst unit of this book is about interpersonal communication and building the foundations for patient-safe communication. The fundamentals of how individual communication patterns are shaped by interpersonal and external factors are explored. Communication is described from various perspectives to promote self-awareness and understanding of ways to improve communication effectiveness within interpersonal relationships. The Transformational Model of Patient-Safe Communication is introduced, focused on the effects and outcomes of the communication process that are especially relevant in health-care communications. The second unit of this book is about patient-safe communication in professional nurse-patient relationships. The developing nurse must now transition from understanding the basics of communication into using specic patient-safe communication strategies within professional nurse-patient relationships. Effective patient-safe communication
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Preface
strategies basic and vital to establishing and maintaining collaborative nurse-patient relationships are explored. The Patient-Safe Communication Process, derived from the Transformational Model of Communication, is introduced as a key patient-safe communication strategy for appropriate and effective communication. The third unit of this book is about health-care team communication and group processes used to promote patient-safe communication between members of the health-care team. Nurses work in multidisciplinary teams, and effective interdisciplinary communication is essential to promote patient-safe communication between members of the health-care team and to promote a culture of patient safety. An understanding of group processes is essential to facilitate effective professional communications in groups to promote optimal patient health transformational outcomes. The nursing work system and conditions in the work environment that create communication failures and harmful events are explored, and health-care team patientsafe communication strategies designed to build safety into health care and prevent patient care errors are described. The evidence is clear: there is an astounding lack of communication in health-care settings, resulting in harmful events to patients. This book and its ancillaries will help you to develop high-level competence in communication and use patient-safe communication strategies to keep patients safe from harmful events and to build a safer health-care system. We wish to acknowledge and thank our editors Tom Ciavarella, Meghan Ziegler, and Caryn Abramowitz for their support and encouragement throughout the writing and production of this book.
Reviewers
Kathleen Anderson, MS, RNP-C Nurse Practitioner Binghamton University East Vestal, New York Heidi Matarasso Bakerman,
MScN RN, BS,
Andrea Deakin, RN, HBScN Coordinator Mohawk College of Applied Arts and Technology Hamilton, Ontario Sally A. Decker, PhD, RN Professor of Nursing Saginaw Valley State University University Center, Michigan Mary Elliott, RN, BScN, MEd Professor Humber Toronto, Ontario Marilyn Kelly, RN, BN, MEd Coordinator Conestoga College Kitchener, Ontario Linda Ann Kucher, MSN, RN, CMSRN Associated Professor of Nursing Gordon College Barnesville, Georgia Gail A. Mathieson-Devereaux,
RN, FNP-C MS,
Nursing Instructor Vanier College St. Laurent, Quebec Katrina Blacklock, RN, BScN, MEd Curriculum Control Instructor NorQuest College Edmonton, Alberta Stephanie Chalupka,
CNS, FAAAOHN EdD, APRN, BC,
Professor and Coordinator Worcester State College Worcester, Massachusetts Yvonne L. Chesna, RN, MS, FNP Family Nurse Practitioner and Clinical Faculty Instructor Binghamton University Binghamton, New York Petrine Churchill, RN, BN Faculty NSCC Burridge Campus Yarmouth, Nova Scotia Katherine E. Cummings,
RN, RCRT BScN, MHSc,
Clinical Instructor Binghamton University Binghamton, New York Barbara Maxwell, MSN, MS, BSN, RN Associate Professor of Nursing SUNY Ulster Stone Ridge, New York Carrie Mines, RN, BScN, MSc(T), PhD Faculty Mohawk College Hamilton, Ontario
Professor Durham College Oshawa, Ontario Sandra Davidson, RN, MSN, CNE Clinical Associate Professor Arizona State University Phoenix, Arizona
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Reviewers
RN, BA
Cheryl S. Sadler, BSN, MEd, MSN, PhD Associate Professor University of Akron Akron, Ohio Laralea Stalkie, RN, BNSc, MSN Professor of Nursing St. Lawrence College and Laurentian University Kingston, Ontario D. Shane Strickland, Lecturer Lakehead University Thunder Bay, Ontario
RN, MScN
Cindy Noble, RN, BNSc, MN, PNC(c) Professor Sheridan Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning Brampton, Ontario Linda OHalloran, BScN, MScN, RN Nursing Professor St. Clair College of Applied Arts and Technology Chatham, Ontario Jason Powell, RN, BScN, MScN, PhD Chair for Nursing Programs Conestoga Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning Kitchener, Ontario Leata Rigg, RegN, BScN, MN Professor Nothern College of Applied Arts and Technology Timmins, Ontario Linda E. Reese, RN, BS, MA Associate Professor College of Staten Island Staten Island, New York Elizabeth Roe, RN PhD Associated Professor of Nursing Saginaw Valley State University University Center, Michigan
Landa Terblanche, PhD, RN Associate Professor Trinity Western University Langley, British Columbia Sharon J. Thompson, Associate Professor Gannon University Erie, Pennsylvania
PhD, RN, MPH
Patricia Woods, RN, BSN, MSN Faculty Langara College Vancouver, British Columbia
Table of Contents
UNIT 1
Interpersonal Communication: The Foundation for Patient-Safe Communication 1
CHAPTER 1 CHAPTER 2 CHAPTER 3 CHAPTER 4 CHAPTER 5 Communication and Patient Safety: Understanding the Connection 3 The Patient-Safe Transformational Model of Communication 11 Communicator Perceptions, Self-Concept, and Self-Esteem Within the Core of the Transformational Model 29 Creating Common Meaning to Attain Transformational Outcomes 45 Culture and Gender Issues in Patient-Safe Communication 61
UNIT 2
Nurse-Patient Communication: Patient-Safe Communication in Professional Relationships 77
CHAPTER 6 CHAPTER 7 CHAPTER 8 CHAPTER 9 CHAPTER 10 CHAPTER 11 Introduction to Nurse-Patient Relationships 79 Patient Safety Risk Factors Affecting Communication Climates 93 The Patient-Safe Communication Strategy of Touch 105 The Patient-Safe Communication Strategy of Humor 119 Nurse-Patient Relationships During Grief, Mourning, and Loss 131 Patient-Safe Communication and Patient Education 143
UNIT 3
Health-Care Team Communication: Group Processes and Patient-Safe Communication Among Team Members 157
CHAPTER 12 CHAPTER 13 Patient Safety Communication Risk Factors in Nursing Work Systems 159 Health-Care Team Collaborative Patient-Safe Communication Strategies 177
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1
Interpersonal Communication: The Foundation for Patient-Safe Communication
CHAPTER
Key Terms
Sentinel event Adverse event Harmful event Unshared information Shared information Decision-relevant information
atient safety always comes rst whenever health care is provided. The purpose of this chapter is to describe the fundamental connection between patient safety and communication. Nursing students must develop knowledge and expertise in communication with the same dedication they learn to use a stethoscope and other medical instruments. Patient-safe communication is the key instrument used by nurses and all health-care providers to prevent communication breakdowns and promote patient safety across health-care settings. This chapter introduces the nurses role responsibilities that involve patient-safe communication. If communication breaks down at any point, patient safety may be compromised and result in serious consequences. Nursing students need to be aware of the latest developments in patient-safe communication strategies.
PATIENT-SAFE COMMUNICATION
Patient-safe communication in nursing is a goal-oriented activity focused on helping patients attain optimal health outcomes. It is the means by which nurses gather and share information, clarify and verify accurate interpretations of information, and establish a
process of working collaboratively with patients, their families, and other health-care providers to achieve common goals of safe, high-quality patient care. There are six primary areas of role responsibility of nurses where communication may break down: 1. Establish the nurse-patient relationship: to build trust and rapport with the patient. Through trust and rapport, patients are more open to sharing personal health information and to describing how they are feeling and how they are coping with the stress of illness. 2. Exchange necessary information with the patient: to keep patients and their families informed; to assess health status, plan interventions, and determine response to treatments and effectiveness of patient teaching. 3. Ensure accuracy in delivering the correct treatment regime to the correct patient: to verify patient identication prior to administering any treatment and to actively involve the patient in the process of care whenever possible. 4. Exchange essential patient information with other health-care providers: to receive information from and to provide information to members of the health-care team to plan care and to work collaboratively to deliver integrated interdisciplinary care services. 5. Transfer responsibility of care of the patient and essential patient information to another: to hand off care and responsibility of the patient to another nurse when leaving the unit for scheduled breaks, to another nursing team during change of shift, or to another nursing unit or health-care agency during patient transfer/discharge. 6. Ensure accuracy in interpreting information: to ensure information exchanged between nurses and patients and other members of the health-care team is interpreted as intended. The consequences of communication breakdowns during performance of these role responsibilities jeopardizes patient safety. Next, we examine the direct connection between communication and patient safety.
that is necessary for accurate decision making and treatment planning. As an example, if the nurse appears rushed or distracted while she is conducting the patients health history, the patient may abbreviate his responses. He may not mention that he has allergies to certain medications, for instance. Without this essential information, the patient may be prescribed a medication that can cause a harmful allergic reaction, which becomes a sentinel event. Nurses and other health-care providers ensure that they have accurately identied the patient when gathering health information and prior to administering treatments. Through this critical communication behavior, nurses can avoid administering the wrong treatments to patients.
as possible. This increases the ability of others to interpret patient information as intended. Statements from one nurse to another such as, He is a bit nauseated or My patients are all OK, I am going to take my break are vague, ambiguous, open to misinterpretation, and do not provide adequate information for others to make accurate clinical decisions.15,16 Misinterpretations are breakdowns in communication that can lead to errors in decision making and inappropriate treatment planning that may result in a harmful event. Knowing that even the most clear and precise verbal message can be misinterpreted, nurses must always seek feedback to determine how another team member has interpreted their messages. Through this communication behavior, nurses can offer clarification if needed and confirm accuracy of interpretation to ensure that patient information has been understood fully by others. Through this same process, nurses ensure that they have interpreted the information they receive from other health-care providers as intended. When communicating with patients, nurses must understand that many factors can interfere with the patients ability to convey and interpret messages accurately. As examples, factors may include pain, anxiety, health literacy, and sensory impairments. Nurses must use clear language that is appropriate to the age and stage of development of the patient to overcome any factors that may interfere with the patients ability to interpret messages accurately. When nurses convey information to patients, they seek feedback from them to ensure that patients have interpreted their messages accurately. Professionally educated in patient-safe communication, nurses and other health-care providers bear the greater responsibility of ensuring accuracy in communication during their interactions and information exchange with patients. When patients share personal health information with nurses, nurses must proceed with high-level communication competency to provide appropriate feedback to patients to conrm that they have accurately interpreted patients messages as intended.
The Joint Commission and the Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation
The role of the Joint Commission and the Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation is to examine and improve the quality of care and services provided to patients by health-care organizations.17,18 These organizations set the standards of quality care and measure hospitals and other health-care organizations compliance with these standards. The Joint Commission and the Canadian Council have developed national patient safety goals for improving communication among health-care providers.19,20 To support achievement of these goals is a series of standards in communication. Hospitals and other health-care organizations, too, are designing patient-safe communication strategies to meet these standards and improve patient safety and reduce the potential for harmful events.
BUILDING HIGH LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Reection. Think about a time you misinterpreted communication. Think about how easy and common it is to misinterpret messages. Think also of times when you have said, Well, had I known that, I would have.... This is a classic example of gaps in communication. 2. Critical Thinking Exercise. How can this nurses statement to the oncoming nurse as she hands off care and responsibility lead to a harmful event: My patients are all OKI am off for break.
References
1. Institute of Medicine: To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System. A Report of the Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. National Academy Press, 1999. www.iom.edu/Object.File/Master/4/ 117/ToErr-8pager.pdf Accessed December 2008. 2. Joint Commission, 2004: Sentinel Event Statistics, June 29, 2004, as cited in Leonard, M., Graham, S., Bonacum, D. The Human Factor: The Critical Importance of Effective Teamwork and Communication in Providing Safe Care. Quality and Safety in Health Care 13:i85-i90, 2004. 3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (National Center for Health Statistics). Births and Deaths: Preliminary Data for 1998. National Vital Statistic Reports 47:6, 1999. 4. Baker, C., Norton, P., Flintoft, V., et al. The Canadian Adverse Events Study: The Incidence of Adverse Events Among Hospital Patients in Canada. CMAJ 170:1678-1686, 2004. 5. Joint Commission, 2008. FAQs for the 2008 National Patient Safety Goals. www.jointcommission.org/NR/rdonlyres/13234515-DD9A-4635-A718D5E84A98AF13/0/2008_FAQs_NPSG_02.pdf Accessed January 2009. 6. Kohn, L.T., Corrigan, J.M., Donaldson, M.S. (eds.). To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System. Washington, DC, National Academy Press, Institute of Medicine: 2000. 7. Spath, P. Reducing Errors Through Work System Improvements. In Spath, P. (ed.). Error Reduction in Health Care, 199-234. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass: 2000. 8. Institute of Medicine: Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Washington, DC, Committee on the Quality Health Care in America, National Academy of Sciences, National Academy Press: 2001. 9. Anthony, M.K. Models of Care: The Inuence of Nurse Communication on Patient Safety. Nursing Economics. ndarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FSW/is_5_20/ai_n18614298 Accessed May 2008. 10. Stasser, G., Titus, W. Pooling of Unshared Information in Group Decision Making: Biased Information Sampling During Discussion. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 48:1467-1478, 1985. 11. Stasser, G., Titus, W. Effects of Information Load and Percentage of Shared Information on the Dissemination of Unshared Information During Group Discussion. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 53:81-93, 1987. 12. World Health Organization, 2007. Communications During Patient Handovers: Patient Safety Solutions. http://www.jcipatientsafety.org/fpdf/presskit/PS- Solution3.pdf Accessed May 2008. 13. Friesen, M.A., White, S.V., Byers, J.F. Hand-Offs: Implications for Nurses. In Hughes, R.G. (ed.). Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Publication No. 08-0043., Rockville, Md. www.ahrq.gov/qual/nurseshdbk Accessed January 2008. 14. Australian Council for Safety and Quality in Health Care 2005. Clinical Handover and Patient Safety Literature Review Report: Safety and Quality Council. www.safetyandquality.org Accessed May 2008. 15. Joint Commission. Focus on Five: Strategies to Improve Hand-Off Communications: Implementing a Process to Resolve Questions. Joint Commission Perspectives on Patient Safety 5:11, 2005. 16. Evanoff, B., Potter, P., Wolf, L., et al. Can We Talk? Priorities for Patient Care Differed Among Health Providers. In Henriksen, K., Battles, J.B., Marks, E., et al. (eds.). Advances in Patient Safety: From Research to Implementation, vol 1, Research Findings. Rockville, Md: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Publication No. 05-0021-1, 2005.
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17. The Joint Commission. About Us. www.jointcommission.org/AboutUs/joint_commission_facts.htm Accessed October 2007. 18. Canadian Patient Safety Institute. About Us. www.patientsafetyinstitute.ca/about.html Accessed November 2007. 19. The Joint Commission. National Patient Safety Goals, 2009. www.jointcommission.org/GeneralPublic/NPSG/09_npsgs.htm 20. Organizational Practices (ROPs): New ROPs for 2009 Accreditation Surveys. www.accreditation-canada.ca Accessed November 2008. 21. World Health Organization, 2004. About Us. www.who.int/patientsafety/about/en/index.html Accessed September 2008. 22. World Health Organization, 2005. News Release: World Health Organization Partners With Joint Commission and Joint Commission International to Eliminate Errors Worldwide. Oakbrook Terrace, Ill. www.who.int/patientsafety/newsalert/WHO_nal.pdf Accessed November 2008. 23. Timmermans, S., Mauck, A. The Promises and Pitfalls of Evidence-Based Medicine. Health Affairs 24:18-28, 2005. 24. Balas, A.E., Borem, S.A. Managing Clinical Knowledge for Health Care Improvement. Yearbook of Medical Informatics. Bethesda, Md., National Library of Medicine: 2000, 65-71. 25. World Health Organization, 2009. Patient Safety Solutions. www.who.int/patientsafety/solutions/ patientsafety/en/ Accessed March 2009.
CHAPTER
Key Terms
Communicators Critical thought processing Message Channel Assign meaning Effects Feedback Validation Context Communication risk factors Patient-safe communication strategies Transformation
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12
ow that you are aware of the connection between communication and patient safety, this chapter will introduce you to the basic concepts of communication. You will begin by assessing your current level of competency in communication. Because communication is central to human existence and the means by which people form and manage relationships, this chapter focuses on interpersonal communication and relationships as the foundation upon which professional nurse-patient and interdisciplinary team communication and relationships are built. The chapter describes how understanding of communication has evolved over time and led to the development of the transformational model of communication. The transformational model is a framework for communicating with high-level competence. It has been used to organize the content of this book and to help you gain the foundational knowledge needed to become a patient-safe communicator.
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ensure they understand the messages of others as the others intend. High-level communicators accomplish this by offering and seeking clarications to ensure a high probability that messages are interpreted as intended. Appropriateness in communication occurs when people assess the context of a situation and adapt communication accordingly.3 We speak differently when communicating with a toddler, a police ofcer, and a good friend. Sensitivity in communication entails recognizing the feelings and perspectives of others that differ from our own.4 It allows us to hear the perspectives of others without judgment and to accept the uniqueness of each person. Achieving communication goals in a manner that maintains the relationship is called saving face. Saving face means making choices on how you respond to others, maintaining respect for others and for yourself, and managing the impressions of yourself you wish to project.4 Figure 2.1 illustrates the four components that dene highlevel communication competency. People who have not developed high-level competence in communication are limited in their efforts to achieve personal and professional goals. For both professional and interpersonal relationships you need to know how to speak clearly, listen effectively, clarify interpretations, be empathetic, deal with conict, and understand communication styles that differ from your own. In professional relationships with patients, these communication competencies provide the foundation for developing trust, encouraging patient sharing of health information, helping patients cope with illness, and providing health education ensuring that patients interpret and understand the information correctly and as intended. In professional relationships with other health-care providers, these competencies are the foundation for sharing patient information accurately for appropriate clinical decision making and for working with other disciplines to provide safe, quality care.
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with them more easily. By knowing others better, we are more able to predict how they will respond to us, and we can adapt our communications accordingly. An interpersonal relationship is the enduring connection that we make with others through interpersonal communication.7 The interpersonal relationship is characterized by trust and honesty in sharing thoughts and feelings within a context of genuine acceptance of the differences between individuals. We develop our sense of belonging, worth, and acceptance through interpersonal relationships.
Noise
Sender
Encodes
Message
Receiver
Decodes
Channel
Sender sends a message; receiver receives message passively
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model of communication.11 The model introduced the element of feedback to reect the two-way ow of communication between people. See Figure 2.3, which illustrates the interactional model of communication. In addition, this model also introduced the element of elds of experience. As Foulger10 indicated, this acknowledged that people create and interpret messages within their own unique perspectives, experiences, culture, and history.
Noise
More opportunities for interference factors
Noise
Channel Feedback Sender and Receivers each contribute to exchanging created and interpreted messages
16
Context
Noise
Noise
Noise
Communicators create and send messages simultaneously and are equally responsible for creating common meaning
In this same era, the element of noise evolved to include: Psychological noise: the emotional state of the communicators, their personalities and preconceived ideas and judgments. Physical noise: external factors that distract communicators like loud music in the background or being unfamiliar with the physical setting. Physiological noise: the biological factors that interfere with communications such as fatigue, illness, or altered cognitive function. Semantic noise: the way people speak, their use of terms, and any dialect or literacy issues. This book introduces the transformational model of communication to be used as a practical guide for interpersonal communication and professional patient-safe communication. In the transformational model, the focus is on the effects of messages and achieving desired outcomes.
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In contrast to the negative outcomes of communication, there are examples of positive transformations that happen every day. Education is a classic example of the transformational process of communication. The outcome of education is, for example, transforming a lay person into a professional nurse. The values, attitudes, and knowledge that are required have been communicated through written, verbal, and nonverbal communication from faculty, peers, and preceptors. Figure 2.5 illustrates the transformational model of communication. The model consists of 12 interacting elements of the communication process within a central core and surrounding rings. Within the central core are two unique individuals communicating. They are sharing information, providing each other with feedback to create a common understanding of each others messages, and creating specic effects to achieve specic desired outcomes through communication. Communicators are inuenced by the context of the communication situation (rst ring) and communication risk factors inherent within the communication situation (second ring). Communicators can use patient-safe communication strategies to overcome
Transformation Patient-Safe Communication Strategies Risk Factors
Readback Hearback TwoChallenge Rule SBAR Concept Map Care Plan No Talk Principle Brief Do Not Use List Huddle Stress Medication Sensory Reconciliation Impairment Debrief Tall man lettering Memory Loss Urgency DESC Patient as Collaborative Member of Care Team CUS Gender Professional Workload Psychological Interruptions Fatigue Humor Touch Grief and Loss Stereotypes Fear Temporal Physical Noise Trust and Rapport Abbreviations
Patient Hand-off
Context
Empathy
Channels
Social
Assign Meaning
Cultural
Validation
Validation
Pain
Effects
Process
Anxiety
Patient Education
Channels
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risk factors (third ring). In the outer ring is the transformational outcome of the communication process. A summary of denitions of the elements of the communication process within the transformational model appears in Table 2.1. A description of each of the twelve elements begins at the core of the model.
TABLE 2.1 Denitions of Elements of the Communication Process Element (1) Communicators Description Originators of facts, thoughts, or feelings Unique bio-psycho-social-cultural-spiritual beings Each communicates to meet human needs; includes physical, social, identity, and practical needs Each is transformed by the communications Cognitive deliberations used during communication to: Determine the human need that must be met and the desired communication outcome Assess the communication situation including the individual, environment, and actual/potential risk factors Select communication strategies to overcome risk factors Create the message by means of effective, appropriate, sensitive, and face-saving verbal and nonverbal behaviors Choose the best channel for conveying the message Evaluate the effects and responses of messages and adjust communications accordingly Facilitate common meaning through feedback to ensure messages are interpreted as intended Contains the facts, thoughts, or feelings of a communicator that are conveyed to another through words and nonverbal clues that enable individuals to assign meaning to the message Includes content and relational dimensions May be intentional or unintentional; are unrepeatable and irreversible Verbal behavior includes spoken, written, or electronic words Nonverbal behavior includes gestures, eye contact, body language, and tone of voice Method or pathway by which the message is conveyed; for example, face to face, letters, e-mail, Internet, phone call, or mass media, such as newspaper, television, radio, movies Communicators assign meaning to the message based on their individual uniqueness, life experiences, context, content, relational dimensions of messages, and how well communicators know one another All messages cause reactions in communicators, which may be the desired effect or an unanticipated effect Effects influence outcomes of the communication situation May be intentional or unintentional; are unrepeatable and irreversible
(3) Message
(4) Channel
(6) Effects
Chapter 2 The Patient-Safe Transformational Model of Communication TABLE 2.1 Element (7) Feedback (8) Validation
(continued)
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Description Verbal and nonverbal response to a message Validation is an attempt to create common meaning Communicators clarify and verify through feedback that the intended meaning of the message has been correctly interpreted The tangible and intangible environment in which communication occurs and influences the communication situation Includes physical, temporal, social, biological, gender, psychological, cultural, spiritual, and professional contexts Anything that potentially or actually interferes with clear communication Includes physical, psychological, physiological, and semantic risk factors Structured, purposeful communication strategies used to overcome communication risk factors when interacting professionally with patients, interdisciplinary health professionals, and during specific error-prone moments within the health-care continuum An outcome of the communication process Includes affective, cognitive, psychomotor, and bio-psychosocial-spiritual cultural changes in people as a result of the communication experience
(12) Transformation
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Social Needs In addition to promoting health and well being, communication provides a vital connection to others. Researchers have identied many social needs that are satised by communicating with others, including the need to share a story, have fun, be consoled, express emotions, gain anothers perspective, and feel connected to others.15 Through social interactions with others, we also learn what is and is not acceptable behavior and how to adjust our behavior to maintain social expectations at home, work, and with friends. We learn social interaction skills through communicating with others who give us cues on how to relate within different social situations. It is through these experiences that we learn about appropriateness of communication. Identity Needs Communication enables us to learn who we are.16 Our sense of identity comes mainly from our interactions with others and our perception of their responses to us. Do their responses tell us we have a good sense of humor, or do they say we are too serious? Do they let us know that we are warm and friendly, or do they give us the sense that we are confrontational and insincere? Deprived of communication with others, we would have little way of knowing the person we are. Practical Needs We would not be able to survive if we did not communicate our practical needs. We tell a server what we want to order for lunch or describe to a clerk the type of coat we want to buy. We may need to learn a new role, understand the tasks associated with a new job, or how to coach and teach others. In health-care settings, patients have a practical need to let their caregivers know their health concerns. They also have the practical need to ask questions about their health status, treatments, and medications and how to manage self-care when they are discharged home. Communication Safety Alert
Nurses must assess which human needs patients may express directly or indirectly. Patients will never say, I have a need for social connectedness. Nurses can, however, be alert for vulnerable populations such as women and the elderly where research has shown the effects of lack of social support on their health.
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that accompany the message; they can only hear them through the speakers voice. Changes in technology have increased our options for conveying messages. Computermediated communication (CMC) provides opportunities to communicate messages electronically over the Internet, including e-mail and instant messaging. CMC has advantages and disadvantages. For example, although instant messaging can be considered real-time or synchronous communication, its disadvantage is that communicators are not able to see or hear each others nonverbal behavior. Communicators have to rely on emoticons, which are symbols that express emotions and nonverbal gestures in CMC. Some symbols provide clues as to the communication process itself, such as indicating you have just said the wrong thing, made a mistake, or relayed a message that is incoherent. Although the development of additional symbols continues, they cannot fully replace the richness of visual and audible clues we experience in face-to-face conversations. E-mail has similar limitations as instant messaging, with a variant feature of being asynchronous, or not in real time. Communicators who send messages must wait until a response is e-mailed back to receive feedback, much like the communication process described in the interactional model of communication. Much of the spontaneity and immediate feedback that comes from synchronous communication is diminished in e-mail communications. There are, however, some clear advantages to consider with e-mail. E-mail can make communications easier in a very busy schedule. Communicators control the time they choose to reply to messages, although as noted previously, this convenience for one communicator can cause frustrations for another. Another advantage of e-mail is that you can rewrite the message until you have expressed exactly what you want, which is not always possible in face-to-face or phone communication. Interpersonal relationships over multiple time zones and long distances can be more easily maintained through CMC where face-to-face conversation may be impossible. Additionally, many new relationships have been initiated via e-mail through Internet dating services and may eventually develop into interpersonal face-to-face relationships. Other channels of communication include written forms, such as letters, greeting cards, and memos. Like the telephone and CMC, written messages lack the nonverbal component, and feedback response times vary. In health care, there are a variety of specic written channels of communication. They include prescription pads, doctors order sheets, nursing notes, and vital sign records. The entire patients health record is a channel for sharing patient information across disciplines, care units, and nursing shifts. Health-care professionals rely on the documentation in the record to provide continuity and safety in patient care. Written communication in health care is discussed in greater detail in Unit 3. The last channel of communication to address is mass media. Mass media include newspapers, tabloids, journals, books, billboards, radio, movies, and television. Mass media provide one-way communication in that a message is conveyed to many people by a communicator, reecting the one-way communication process in the linear model of communication. Feedback may only come indirectly by way of television ratings, trends in sales, complaints to the customer service department, or a lawsuit.
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interacting factors. These factors include the unique perspectives of the communicators, the context of the communication situation, the content and relational dimensions of the message, and any risk factors that may interfere with interpreting the intended meaning of the message accurately. Risk factors can include each communicators physical and cognitive ability to speak, listen, and interpret messages.
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verbal and nonverbal aspects of messages, communicators are prevented from making interpretation errors during communication.
The social context includes the rules, standards, or norms that govern interpersonal communications relative to the status and nature of the relationship that exists between communicators. Whenever we communicate, we reveal something about the social rank of the relationship and the people with whom we communicate, just as we offer clues that help them dene their relationship with us.17 The spiritual context refers to the meaning of life, hope, and purpose of existence for the communicators. Spirituality includes, but is not limited to, religious beliefs. In a professional context, additional rules and norms will guide your behavior and communication choices. Within the professional context in health care, nurses communicate and
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work collaboratively with patients and other health disciplines to promote optimal health outcomes.
TABLE 2.2 Examples of Risk Factors in Social and Health-Care Settings Risk Factors Physical Examples in Social Settings Crowded room, noisy gathering, distasteful outfit, bizarre makeup Bad mood, distraction by inner thoughts and stressors, stereotyping, bias, prejudices Pain, anxiety, nervousness, twitch, having to go to the bathroom Intoxicated speech, monotone voice, heavy accent, English as second language Examples in Health-Care Settings Alarms, overhead pages, lack of privacy, noisy hallways Stress of illness, fear of the unknown, maladaptive coping responses, preconceived judgments Anxiety, acute pain, heavy sedation, cognitive or sensory impairment Slurred speech, accent, literacy level, illegible handwriting, spelling mistakes, abbreviations
Psychological
Physiological
Semantic
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BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Reection. Think about a conversation you had with someone recently that did not go the way you had expected. Write the scenario out and comment on the following: (1) which human need motivated your need to communicate, (2) the context of the situation and how your context may have differed from that of the person with whom you were comunicating, (3) the intended effect you were trying to create, (4) ability to create common meaning, (5) risk factors that interfered with the communication process, and (6) reasons why the desired outcome was not achieved. 2. Practice. Try assessing the context of a situation accurately. Look around you when you communicateis the environment one that is conducive to having a conversation? Think about what would make the setting better. Consider situations in which you observed someone communicating out of context.
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References
1. Spitzberg, B.H., Cupach, W. R. (1984). Interpersonal Communication Competence. Beverly Hills, Calif., Sage: 1984. 2. Parry, S.B. Just What is a Competency (And Why Should We Care?). Training 35:58-64, 1998. 3. Wilson, S.R., Sabee, C.M. Explicating Communication Competence as a Theoretical Term. In Greene, J.O. (ed.), Handbook of Communication and Social Interaction Skills, p. 50. Mahwah, N.J., Erlbaum: 2003. 4. Wiemann, J.M., Takai, J., Ota, H., et al.: A Relational Model of Communication Competence. In Kovacic, B. (ed.), Emerging Theories of Human Communication, Albany, N.Y., SUNY Press: 1997. 5. Gouran, D., Wiethoff, W.E., Doelger, J.A. Mastering Communication, 2nd ed. Boston, Allyn and Bacon: 1994. 6. Buber, M. I and Thou. New York, Scribners: 1958. 7. Beebe, S.A., Beebe, S., Redmond, M.V., et al.: Interpersonal Communication: Relating to Others, 4th ed. Toronto, Ontario, Pearson Education Canada: 2007. 8. Shannon, C.E., Weaver, E. The Mathematical Theory of Communication. Champaign, Ill., University of Illinois Press: 1949. 9. Leary, T. The Theory and Measurement Methodology of Interpersonal Communication. Psychiatry 18:147, 1955. 10. Foulger, D. 2004. Models of the Communication Process. http://foulger.info/davis/research/uniedModelOfCommunication.htm Accessed Sept. 2009. 11. Schramm, W. How Communication Works. In Schramm, W. (ed.),The Process and Effects of Communication, pp. 3-26. Urbana, Ill., University of Illinois Press: 1954. 12. Barnlund, D.C. A Transactional Model of Communication. In Sereno, K.K., Mortensen, C.D. (eds). Foundations of Communication Theory. New York, Harper and Row: 1970. 13. Anderson, R., Ross, V. Questions of Communication: A Practical Introduction to Theory. New York, St. Martins Press: 1994. 14. World Health Organization. Wilkinson, R., Marmot, M. (eds.), Social Determinants of Health: The Solid Facts, 2nd ed., 2003. http://www.euro.who.int/document/e81384.pdf Accessed November 2007. 15. Rubin, R.B., Perse, E.M., Barbato, C.A. Conceptualization and Measurement of Interpersonal Communication Motives. Human Communication Research 14:602-628, 1988. 16. Fogel, A., de Koeyer, I. Bellagamba, F., et al. The Dialogical Self in the First Two Years of Life: Embarking on a Journey of Discovery. Theory and Psychology 12:191-205, 2002. 17. Weaver, R.L. 1996. Understanding Interpersonal Communication, 7th ed. New York, Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers: 1996. 18. Dillard, J.P., Soloman, D.H., Palmer, M.T. Structuring the Concept of Relational Communication. Communication Monographs, 66:49-65, 1999.
CHAPTER
Communicator Perceptions, Self-Concept, and SelfEsteem Within the Core of the Transformational Model
Learning Outcomes
Key Terms
Self-concept Self-esteem Perception Closure Superimpose Select Organize Interpret Attend Attribution theory Fish-and-water effect Self-verication Self-serving bias Perception check Belief Value Attitude Reected appraisal Social comparison Self-appraisal Self-awareness Disclosure Johari window Self-fullling prophecy Fundamental attribution error
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his chapter focuses on the communicators within the core of the transformational model and three unique characteristics of each communicator that affect every communication situation: self-concept, self-esteem, and perception. Self-concept is who the communicators think they are; self-esteem is what they think of themselves; and perception is how they perceive themselves, their world, and others within it. Self-concept, self-esteem, and perception are highlighted within the core of the transformational model as shown in Figure 3.1. Having a better understanding of how you see yourself in terms of self-concept and self-esteem and how you see others in the world around you through your own perceptions helps you to appreciate the uniqueness of others when you communicate with them. This chapter covers the importance of self-awareness, perceiving others accurately, and developing sensitivity to the perspectives of others. For an interactive version of this activity, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com How you answer the questions in the quiz depends on your perception of self. You communicate based on ideas of yourself and your perceptions. Self and perception are closely related and often difcult to separate because how you see others and the world around you depends on what you think of yourself.1 To gain appreciation of the interrelatedness of self and perception in the communication process, think about two people communicating. Are there only two people involved or are there more? In every interpersonal communication you share with another person, at least six people are involved2: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. The person you think you are The person you think your partner is The person your partner thinks s/he is The person your partner thinks you are The person you believe your partner thinks you are The person your partner believes you think s/he is
In each statement, you can exchange the word think with the word perceive to begin to understand the importance of communicators perceptions of themselves and others during any communication situation.
Self-Concept
Self-Esteem
Assign Meaning
Channels
Validation
Validation
Channels Perceptions
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into categories. Our classification of stimuli into categories is dependent upon our personality, acquired knowledge, and past experiences and tends to follow a common framework3-5: Physical (beautiful or ugly, short or tall, small or large) Similarity (are like my friends or not, dress like I do or not, are of my culture or not) Role or social position (teacher, police ofcer, colleague) Interaction (outgoing or shy, friendly or unfriendly, pleasant or obnoxious) Psychological (happy or sad, nervous or calm, insecure or condent) Expected behavior (how to dress, when to talk and when to listen, how to eat with proper table manners)
We also use closure to help us organize information. Look at Figure 3.2. Do you see a triangle and a square rather than a series of unconnected lines? The process of lling in gaps between pieces of information is called closure. From a minimum of cues we can put together a fairly complete picture, making sense of the available information through closure. Nevertheless, when we use closure, we may not form accurate perceptions upon which to base subsequent decisions. Communication Safety Alert
The risk of harmful events increases when health-care providers use closure to ll in the blanks for patients. Although it may take patients time to tell their health history, and they may pause and stumble over words or not know the words to use, listen to the story in its entirety from their perspective, and do not ll in the blanks. Appropriate health-care decisions and clinical judgments are based on accurate communication with patients.
In addition, we also organize by superimposing. Superimpose means to place a familiar structure on the stimuli/information. Look at Figure 3.3 and determine if you can perceive the words. If you perceived this to be Tylenol tablets, you have superimposed. You have created meaningful words from an assemblage of letters of the alphabet. This same principle applies to our perceptions of people. When we have an incomplete picture of someone, we impose a pattern of behavior or structure to help us understand who they are. Communication Safety Alert
Superimposing when a doctors order is not written legibly can lead to medication and treatment errors that cause patient harm. Superimposing a particular stereotype on a patient, such as men are more tolerant of pain than women, can lead to inappropriate treatment.
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Tylnol tblt
Interpretation The nal stage of the perception process is interpretation. Once we have selected and organized stimuli into categories, we are ready to interpret what the information means. When we interpret, we assign meaning to the stimuli from our senses that are based on our own unique reality.
to predict
to achieve
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Our ability to perceive others can be highly inaccurate, however. Examples of how we inaccurately attribute motives and causes of behavior to others in our personal and professional life include the following: 1. We form perceptions according to stereotypes. We form broad generalizations about groups of people and conclude that all who belong to the group are the same. When we stereotype, we obscure the uniqueness of the individual. 2. We cling to rst impressions, even if they are wrong. We label people by what our senses tell us the rst time (for example, Hes happy-go-lucky, Shes so serious.) Once we form an opinion of someone, we tend to hold fast to it and make any conicting information t our opinion.3 3. We tend to assume that others think and behave as we do. If we like quiet while we are studying, we believe others do as well. Not only do we assume that others believe as we do, we have a tendency to conclude that there is something wrong with people who do not think like we do. As a nurse, it is important that you understand that others do not think, do not feel, and are not motivated to act in the same way as you. 4. We tend to favor negative impressions over positive ones. When we are aware of the positive and negative qualities of an individual, the negative qualities have a greater inuence on how we perceive and assign meaning to the characteristics of the individual. 5. We are inuenced by our expectations. We expect people to behave in a certain way. When they behave outside our set of expectations, we may form negative impressions of them. Understanding the inuence of culture and other factors on how people behave will make it easier for you to accept variations in expected behaviors and to interpret the motives and behaviors of others more accurately. 6. We judge others more harshly than ourselves, given the same situation. This tendency is called the self-serving bias. It is our human nature to enhance ourself. For example, we tend to believe we are more trustworthy and moral than others.11 The self-serving bias is a mechanism through which we maintain our positive beliefs in ourself.12 When others have misfortunes, we blame the problem on their personal qualities; when we have misfortunes, we nd explanations outside ourselves.13 7. We take credit for success while denying responsibility for failure. This is another expression of the self-serving bias.12 We tend to say we attained something when a task outcome is successful but blame circumstances or others for failed task outcomes.11 8. We are more likely to believe that people are to blame when they make mistakes than to believe that mistakes made were beyond their control. This perception error is called the fundamental attribution error.13 We believe that the cause of a problem or a mistake is something personally controllable; therefore, we attribute the mistake to an individuals personal qualities or weakness of character.7 As you will read in Unit 3, however, there are many factors that cause mistakes that have little to do with individual character.
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perception process that is inuenced by who you are and involves just you. Adler3 suggests that the perception check includes three components: 1. A description of the behavior you noticed 2. Two possible interpretations of the behavior 3. A request for clarication about how to interpret the behavior. Consider the following nursing example. You are assigned to care for a rst-day postoperative patient. The patient denies pain when you ask her to rate her pain on a 10-point scale. You see, however, that she is on the verge of tears. You check perception with her: I know you denied pain when I asked, but I can see that you have tears in your eyes [behavior]. Are you having pain [rst interpretation], or has something happened to upset you [second interpretation]? I need to know what is happening here so that I can help you [request for clarication]. In nursing, perception checking is used to ensure we are interpreting our patients behavior accurately. The goal of perception checking is mutual understanding and a cooperative approach to communication. It signals an attitude of respect and concern for the other person.3 Weaver13 describes that perception checking improves communication and relationships because interactions between individuals: 1. Become grounded on perceptions that are more accurate because perceptions are tested through actual interaction 2. Become better adapted to each individual because each has a better understanding of the needs of the other 3. Become less open to chance because there is less guessing about the person and the message 4. Are at less risk for breakdown from misinterpretation and misperceptions The remainder of the chapter addresses the importance of self-perception in communication with others. Specically, it discusses how self-concept and self-esteem develop and the effect of both on communication in interpersonal relationships.
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possessions you have, such as a luxury car or expensive jewelry. Collectively, the sum of all of our perceptions of self allows us to know who we are by experiencing ourselves in relation to others and our signicant life events. Who you are is reected in your personal values, attitudes, and beliefs. These are all learned responses from your life experiences that shape self-concept and behavior.7 A value is an enduring concept of good or bad, right and wrong. Values are formed by your interpersonal relationships beginning with the messages you received as children from your parents. For example, you may have learned to value education as something good, cheating as something bad. Values are more resistant to change than either attitudes or beliefs. An attitude represents your likes and dislikes. Attitude is your learned response, either favorable or unfavorable, to a person, object, event, or idea. Beliefs are the ways in which you create reality through determining if something is true or false. Beliefs are built from what you have learned through previous experiences. The development of self-concept is a complex process. We are not born with a concept of self; it is accumulated through our interactions with the world.15 This evolution is inuenced by four key factors: reected appraisal, social comparisons, cultural and societal inuence, and self-appraisal. Reected Appraisals In the early 1900s, sociologist George Cooley introduced the theory that self-concept is developed by seeing ourselves through a looking glass.16 The looking glass, or reflected appraisal, is the mechanism for learning who we are by the way others respond to us and treat us. In other words, the way we believe others perceive us is the way we perceive ourselves.17 To the extent that you receive supportive messages, you perceive yourself as condent and capable, and you appreciate and value yourself. To the extent that you receive messages of criticism, you perceive yourself as less valuable and capable.18 Bergner and Holmes19 describe four requirements that must be met before a reected appraisal will be regarded important enough to affect self-concept: 1. 2. 3. 4. The person offering the appraisal must be someone perceived as competent to do so. The appraisal must be reasonable in terms of an individuals self-belief. The appraisal must come from someone who has earned the individuals condence. Appraisals that are consistent and numerous are more persuasive than appraisals that are single events.
Social Comparisons We also develop self-concept by evaluating ourselves in terms of how we compare with others. Social comparison refers to the process through which people come to know themselves by evaluating their knowledge, values, attitudes, and skills in comparison with others. In most cases, we try to compare ourselves with those in our peer group or with those with whom we are similar. In the nursing profession, for example, you will compare yourself to other nurses on the patient care unit to see if you are as skilled, knowledgeable, or compassionate. You gain additional perspective and self-definitions when you draw comparisons.
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Societal and Cultural Inuence Through your upbringing, you were inuenced by the traditions of your culture, the norms of your community, and expectations of society. These inuences became part of who you are. For example, a societal norm for zero tolerance for impaired drivers may shape your beliefs, values, and attitudes about designated drivers. Self-Appraisal Your self-concept is inuenced through self-appraisal. You react to and evaluate your own behavior, quirks, and beliefs. For example, people may tell you that you are condent and outgoing, yet you know that you are actually quite shy and nervous around people you do not know. Collectively, reected appraisals, social comparisons, societal and cultural inuence, and self-appraisal help to develop our identity and self-concept.
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3. People tend to respond to the cues by adjusting their behavior to match them 4. The result is that the expectation comes true In health care, we see the negative effects of the self-fullling prophecy when a patient with a poor self-concept says, Ill never be able to remember anything you are telling me about my discharge instructions. The nurse responds, We will go over the instructions together, and I can review with you any areas you feel are still unclear. The patient states, Dont bother, I just know Ill never get it right. In this example, the patient has created the prophecy that he will not understand the instructions, and by his conscious and subconscious behaviors he will make the prophecy come true, unless the nurse communicates effectively to boost his condence.
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2. Blind self: This quadrant represents the things people know about you but that you do not know about yourself. You may feel you are a good conversationalist, but other people consistently nd you ramble from topic to topic. People who have a large blind self quadrant can be frustrating to be around because they have little idea about how they come across to others. 3. Hidden self: In this quadrant the hidden self represents all that you know of yourself but purposely keep hidden from others. This may be embarrassments you do not want to share with others, or it may be information that you hold back until you know the person better. 4. Unknown self: The unknown self represents the truths about yourself that neither you nor others know. In the most complex sense, this refers to repressed memories. In a practical sense, it refers to your life as it evolves throughout your lifetime. The main theme of the Johari Window is that self-awareness can be increased by getting to know your blind self through eliciting feedback from others. Your family, close friends, other students, and nursing faculty will each see you differently and may give different feedback. You are all of these selves. The following are methods you can use to increase your self-awareness: Listen, really listen, to others. Seek out information about yourself to increase self-awareness because others will perceive you with greater accuracy than you perceive yourself.
Self-Disclosure
Self-disclosure is sharing information that others would not normally know or discover.24 In order for communication to be considered self-disclosing, it must contain personal information about the sender; the sender must communicate this information; and another person must be an intended target.25 You can learn more about yourself and develop increased self-awareness through self-disclosure. When you self-disclose, others learn about who you are at a deeper, more personal, level. They are able to provide you with accurate feedback on who you are because they know your uniqueness and how you see the world around you. They share their observations, insights, and perspectives of you, and self-awareness increases. Within social relationships, when you self-disclose to someone, the other will also disclose. This is known as the norm of reciprocity.26 Knowing more about each other reduces
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uncertainty and ambiguity in how you each will respond during communications; as a result, communication and relationships improve. Rosenfeld27 suggests people disclose for a variety of reasons: Unloadvent, get something off their chest Self-claricationclarify beliefs, opinions, thoughts, attitudes Self-validationelicit conrmation about a self-belief Other reasons individuals disclose personal information include: Impression formationmeans to market oneself to others during a job interview or to develop a romantic relationship28 Relationship maintenancerelationships must be nourished by self-disclosure29 Societal inuencea means of helping others, such as self-help groups30 Health needsexpress ones health beliefs and behaviors that may have contributed to the current health state Guidelines for Disclosure in Nurse-Patient Relationships: A Patient-Safe Communication Strategy Nurses encourage patients to disclose personal information. Access to patient information helps the health-care team determine health status, behavior, beliefs, resources, and coping mechanisms to guide accurate clinical decision making and to implement appropriate patient-specific interventions. Nurses do not disclose in the nurse-patient relationship in the same way they do in private interpersonal relationships. Disclosure in relationships with patients must be purposeful. Purposeful disclosure is a patient-safe therapeutic response that can increase the patients comfort during a procedure or during the health assessment. For example, the nurse may disclose the following during a health assessment when it appears the patient is stressed trying to balance work and home life: Sometimes I am so busy that I forget to take the time to just relax and have some quiet time alone. Does this sometimes happen to you as well? The patient would then feel encouraged to agree or disagree and know it is safe to add specific details from his own perspective. Purposeful self-disclosure by the nurse may promote honesty and openness for the patient but never burdens the patient with the nurses problems.31 Figure 3.6 provides a comparison of disclosure and outcomes in interpersonal and nurse-patient relationships.
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Figure 3.6 Comparison of disclosure and outcomes in social interpersonal and nurse-patient relationships.
How Levels of Esteem Affect Communication and Interpersonal Relationships The communication styles of people based on self-esteem are rooted in family development theory.33 Low self-esteem exacts a high price on individual and interpersonal relationships. With low self-esteem, communication is indirect, vague, and dishonest. The person responds to others fearfully and feels tension and stress. The result of low self-esteem is loneliness and isolation. The person with high self-esteem responds to others receptively, really listens to what others are saying, and treats others with respect. The person can ask for advice and help from others but also can make decisions. A person with high self-esteem is not afraid to fail and can learn from mistakes. Increasing self-esteem in ourselves and others is a prerequisite for high-level communication competency.
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Strategies to Improve Self-Esteem How can we overcome our innate resistance to change to allow ourselves to grow and develop positive self-esteem? Try the following techniques outlined in Table 3.1.
TABLE 3.1 Developing Positive Self-Esteem To Increase Your Self-Esteem: Use affirmations and positive statements These statements help reinforce positive aspects of your personality and experience. Every day, you can boost your sense of self-esteem by saying positive things to yourself, such as I am a caring person. List the things you would like to experience. Construct the statements as if you were already enjoying the situations you list, beginning each statement with I am.... Visualize each situation, and get into the habit of repeating this process several times a day. Instead, think of a situation you handled well or something of which you are really proud.
Visualization exercises
To Increase the Self-Esteem of Others: Define clear and realistic goals People with low self-esteem often tend to overgeneralize and think in nonspecific ways. They may say, I just want to be happy. Respond by asking for more specifics, What does happiness mean to you? Turning a general, nonspecific feeling into a goal toward which to work promotes the path to improved self-esteem. Giving honest praise to people for what they have achieved bolsters their self-esteem. However, the praise must be honest and true to the persons accomplishment.
CHAPTER SUMMARY The focus of this chapter was on the communicators within the core of the transformational model and the unique components of perception and self that they bring to each communication situation. The chapter began with the perception process and described how individuals form perceptions and assign meaning to what they hear and observe from their own unique perspective. Although we all go through the same perception process, no two individuals will perceive words, events, or people the same way. The chapter also focused on the self in communications, which includes self-concept and self-esteem. Development of self-concept is a complex process that is influenced by
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reflected appraisals, social comparisons, societal and cultural influences, and self-appraisals. Finally, the chapter focused on self-esteem. Having a high level of self-esteem and self-awareness, and understanding the perceptual variances that interplay during communications, will help you to communicate with high-level competency in your personal and professional life.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Reection. Who Are You exercise.7 The responses will help you begin to explore your perceptions and sense of self. Who Are You? Ask yourself the question,Who are you?Ask yourself 10 times. Write each of your responses on a piece of paper. Did you find this a hard exercise? Did you have to stop and really think about who you are? This exercise provides an opportunity for you to selfperceive and to develop greater self-awareness. 2. Critical Thinking. Read the following scenario and answer the questions: The nurse is taking a health history and asks the patient to describe his symptoms. He is vague in describing how long he has had the symptoms by saying, The pain started recently, but its actually been going on for a long time. A. Using the three components of perception checking, how would you clarify the patients description of the duration of his symptoms? The nurse then asks if the patient has any allergies. He replies that he has no allergies but had some redness from the tape used during his last hospitalization.The nurse informs the patient that he has described an allergy to tape.The patient remarks,OK, now I know. B. Where did creating common meaning of the term allergy occur in this situation? Later, the patient tells his wife,My nurse thinks I am an idiot because I didnt know that I had an allergy to tape. Maybe I am an idiot. Maybe I just wont say anything at all when she asks me questions. C. How might the nurse have informed the patient that redness from tape is an allergy that was interpreted by the patient as the nurse thinks I am an idiot? How could the nurse respond in a more sensitive way? D. What type of self-fulfilling prophecy has occurred: the self-imposing prophecy or the Pygmalion effect? Answers are located at the back of the book.
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References
1. Hybels, S., Weaver R.L. Communicating Effectively, 8th ed. McGraw-Hill, New York: 2007. 2. Barnlund, D.C. Toward a Meaning-Centered Philosophy of Communication. Journal of Communication 12:202, 1962. 3. Adler, R.B., Rosenfeld, L.B., Proctor R.F., et al. Interplay: The Process of Interpersonal Communication. Don Mills, Ontario, Oxford University Press: 2006, pp. 68-92. 4. DeVito, J.A. The Interpersonal Communication Book, 11th ed. Toronto, Ontario, Pearson Education: Canada: 2007. 5. Andersen, P.A. Nonverbal Communication: Forms and Functions. Palo Alto, Calif., Mayeld: 1999. 6. Swann, W.B. Self-Verication: Bringing Social Reality Into Harmony With the Self. In Suls, J., Greenwald, A.G. (Eds.), Psychological Perspectives on the Self, vol. 2. Hillsdale, N.J., Erlbaum: 1983, pp. 33-66. 7. Beebe, S.A., Beebe, S.J., Redmond, M.V., et al. Interpersonal Communication, 4th ed. Toronto, Ontario, Pearson Education Canada: 2007. 8. Gosling, S.D., John, O.P., Craik, K.H., et al. Do People Know How They Behave? Self-Reported Act Frequencies Compared With On-Line Codings by Observers. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 74:1337-1349, 1998. 9. Hinton, P.R. The Psychology of Interpersonal Perception. New York, Routledge: 1993. 10. Berger, C.R., Bradac, J.J. Language and Social Knowledge. Baltimore, Edward Arnold: 1982. 11. Sedikides, C., Campbell, W.K., Reeder, G. D., et al. The Self-Serving Bias in Relational Context. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 74:378-386, 1998. 12. Miller, D. T., Ross, M. Self-Serving Biases in Attribution of Causality: Fact or Fiction? Psychological Bulletin 82:213-225, 1975 13. Floyd, K. Attributions for nonnverbal expressions of liking and disliking: The extended self-serving bias. Western Journal of Communication, 64, 385-404, 2000. 14. Weaver, R.L. Understanding Interpersonal Communication. 7th ed. New York, Addison-Wesley: 1996. 15. Rosenblith, J.F. In the Beginning: Development From Conception to Age Two. Newbury Park, Calif., Sage: 1992 16. Cooley, G.H. Human Nature and the Social Order. New York, Scribners: 1912. 17. Van Wagner, K. The Reected Appraisal Process http://psychology.about.com/od/rindex/g/reectapp.htm Accessed November, 2007. 18. Felson, R.B. Reected Appraisal and the Development of Self. Social Psychology Quarterly 48:71-78, 1985. 19. Bergner, R.M., Holmes, J.R. Self-Concepts and Self-Concept Change: A Status Dynamic Approach. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training 37:36-44, 2000. 20. Merton, R.K. Social Theory and Social Structure. New York, Free Press: 1968. 21. Rosenthal. R., Jacobson, L. Pygmalion in the Classroom. New York, Holt, Rhinehart and Winston: 1968. 22. Kolar, D.W., Funder, D.C., Colvin R.C. Comparing the Accuracy of Personality Judgments by the Self and Knowledgeable Others. Journal of Personality 64:311-337, 1996. 23. Luft, J., Ingham, H. The Johari Window: A Graphic Model of Interpersonal Awareness. Proceedings of the Western Training Laboratory in Group Development. Los Angeles, UCLA: 1955. 24. Jourard, S.M. A Study of Self-Disclosure. Scientic American 198:77-82, 1958. 25. Cozby, P.C. Self-Disclosure: A Literature Review. Psychological Bulletin 79:73-91, 1973. 26. Solanoc, H., Dunnam, M. Twos Company: Self-Disclosure and Reciprocity in Triads Versus Dyads. Social Psychology Quarterly 48:2, 1985. 27. Rosenfeld, L.B. Overview of the Ways Privacy, Secrecy, and Disclosure are Balanced in Todays Society. In Petronio, S. (ed.), Balancing the Secrets of Private Disclosures. Mahwah, N.J., Lawrence Erlbaum: 2000, pp. 3-17. 28. Stiles, W.B., Waltz, N.C., Schroeder, M.A.B., et al. Attractiveness and Disclosure in Initial Encounters of Mixed-Sex Dyads. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 13:303-312, 1996. 29. Rosenfeld, L.B., Bowen, G.L. Marital Disclosure and Marital Satisfaction: Direct-Effect Versus Interaction-Effect Models. Western Journal of Speech Communication 55:69-84, 1991. 30. Priest, P.J., Dominic, J.R. Pulp Pulpits: Self-Disclosure on Donahue. Journal of Communication 44:74, 1994. 31. Keltner, N.L., Schwecke, L.H., Bostrom, C.E. Psychiatric Nursing, St. Louis, Mosby: 1999. 32. Maslow, A.H. A Theory of Human Motivation. Psychological Review 50:370-396, 1943. 33. Satir, V. The New Peoplemaking. Mountainview, Calif., Science and Behavior Books: 1988.
CHAPTER
Key Terms
Active listening Blocking responses Connotative Denotative Empathy Paraphrasing Paralanguage Proxemics Gestures Eye contact Facial expressions Touch
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his chapter focuses on how we create common meaning with others so as to create positive transformations and positive outcomes in health-care situations. By establishing mutually shared understanding between communicators, we can avoid miscommunications through misinterpretations and misunderstandings and, ultimately, avoid patient harm. Transformational outcomes are attained through high-level communication involving purposeful conveyance, channeling and reception of messages to create common meaning between communicators. The chapter describes factors that pose risk to listening effectively and examines patient-safe communication strategies that can improve the effectiveness of listening. For an interactive version of this activity, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com This chapter specically focuses on how high-level communicators use verbal language and nonverbal behavior to convey messages effectively, select channels to send messages, and receive and respond to messages through the listening process and effective listening responses.
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4. Confusion, misunderstanding, and conict in relationships most often result from differences in meanings. 5. Awareness and sensitivity in interpersonal, nurse-patient, and interdisciplinary communications are important. Do not assume that words mean the same thing to different individuals; clarify meanings by asking questions; actively seek feedback to help others interpret messages within your intended meaning. It is important to understand that words can evoke unpredictable effects or responses, reactions, and results in people. Individuals react to words according to the meanings they have assigned. Therefore, high-level communicators will purposefully select the words to convey their messages depending on their perception of how others will respond to and interpret the message. Consider the following examples of a simple request to shut the door4: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Close the door. Can you close the door? Would you please close the door? It might help if you would close the door. Would you mind terribly if I asked that you close the door? Did you forget the door? How about a bit less breeze? Its getting pretty drafty in here. I dont want the cat to get out.
We use critical thought processing to make careful adaptations to ensure our communications are appropriate for the context of the given situation and for the individuals to whom we direct the message. High-level communicators avoid sending ambiguous verbal messages.
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Sometimes we use generalizations or stereotypes, which also contribute to ambiguous verbal messages. Every physician should take a course in handwriting or All nurses need to work on patient condentiality. In reality, not every doctor in the world has unreadable handwriting, and not every nurse worldwide breeches condentiality. The use of tag questions also sends ambiguous messages. Tag questions make declarative statements less forceful: It would mean a few hours of my time, wouldnt it? Tag questions send a message of ambivalence and may imply that you are indecisive about what you intend to do. Introductory disclaimers also make a statement less forceful and can contradict the intended meaning of the message. Dont get me wrong here, but I think you should really take a good look at your relationship. Other ambiguous types of messages include those that are posed as questions but are really statements of opinion, thought, or fact. Dont you think the guest speaker was awful? The question posed here is really a signal for a specic response and is a communication trap. Your opinion is not truly being solicited; what is sought is agreement with the opinion of another. Communicators can also give statements of their opinions posed as questions this way: Are you really going to the dance dressed like that? Ambiguous messages may also carry a hidden agenda. For example, Are you busy this weekend? or What are you doing tomorrow? are questions with an agenda. Your friend may have plans for you. A clear way of stating this message would be, I am moving this weekend/tomorrow. Are you available to help?
Chapter 4 Creating Common Meaning to Attain Transformational Outcomes TABLE 4.1 Functions of Nonverbal Communication Behaviors Conveys emotions and feelings Relatively free of deception
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Nonverbal communication is the richest source of information of your emotions and feelings. Nonverbal communication conveys intended meanings that are relatively free of deception. Words can conceal, deceive, and distort facts, thoughts, and feelings, whereas nonverbal communication is natural, automatic, and most often an unconscious act free of deception. However, people can convey false messages nonverbally, such as feigned interest in a subject or a fake smile. Nonverbal communication is the equivalent of a picture is worth a thousand words during interpersonal, nurse-patient, and interdisciplinary communications. Gestures such as thumbs up, rolling your eyes, pointing to your watch, and a friendly wink are efficient ways of conveying a message. Nonverbal communication can help regulate conversations with others. We often use hand signals to indicate I am turning the table over to you or lowering or raising the pitch in our voice to signal we are at the end of our conversation and that it is now someone elses turn. Nonverbal communication represents the most favorable means for expressing emotions indirectly. When you like someone, you may test the water first by flirting as opposed to verbally stating you like them. It is a means to save face and protect self-esteem. Nonverbal behavior can reinforce a verbal message. You may say to someone to go north about two blocks and point in the appropriate direction. Nonverbal behavior can replace words. Your classmate can turn to you and ask if you understood the instructions, and you may respond by shaking your head or shrugging your shoulders. Nonverbal behavior can accentuate the verbal message by placing emphasis on certain words within a sentence through the tone in your voice. Nonverbal behavior prevails. When someone is visibly upset yet denies being upset when asked, assign more meaning to the nonverbal behavior than to the spoken words.
Provides emphasis
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Nonverbal behaviors that are particularly important to be aware of in yourself and others include facial expressions, eye contact, paralanguage, gestures, clothing, proxemics, and touch. Nurses must effectively use nonverbal behaviors to establish and maintain nurse-patient and interdisciplinary relationships. Facial expressions. The human face is the most expressive part of the human body. Research reveals that the human face is capable of producing over 250,000 types of expressions.9,10 Facial expressions communicate emotional meaning more accurately than any other nonverbal behavior.10 Through facial expressions, individuals provide nonverbal signals or clues that reveal their reactions to the verbal and nonverbal behaviors of others. Eye contact. Eye contact can convey a great deal of information. We establish eye contact with another communicator because it is a classic signal (in Western culture) that we are interested in opening communications. We convey interest and that we are paying attention to the conversation by maintaining eye contact. We maintain eye contact to determine others nonverbal reactions to our messages and to gauge if others are responding the way we had anticipated. When we look at the other communicators, we can gauge if they are having difculty in understanding the intended meaning of our messages. Tone of voice, also known as paralanguage. The human voice has many characteristics that can alter the way words are spoken. This is called paralanguage. Paralanguage is dened as the non-linguistic means of vocal expression; for example, tone, pitch, and volume.8 Paralanguage conveys attitudes on a particular subject, mood, and feelings about others. By changing vocal rate, tone, pitch, and volume, we can give the same words different meanings. Gestures. Body gestures convey attitudes and reinforce facial and paralanguage communication. Body gestures are also called body language. The way people nod their head, wave their hands, and position themselves reveals acceptance or bias about a certain topic or how much they like or dislike the communicator.11 Clothing. Clothing reveals emotions. When we are feeling depressed, we may feel most comfortable in loose clothing or pajamas. When feeling highly condent, we may feel like wearing our best outt. The style of dress gives others cues on how to respond. Clothing can change our behavior and the behavior of others toward us. You behave differently when you are in your nursing uniform as opposed to when you are wearing jeans and a T-shirt. People will respond to you differently when you are wearing your nursing uniform than when you are wearing street clothing. Clothing conveys the following nonverbal messages to others:12 Economic level Educational level Trustworthiness Social position
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Proxemics: Proxemics refers to how people use space around them. Each of us maintains an invisible bubble, or personal space, that gives us psychological comfort when we interact with others. Hall13 describes four comfort zones: Intimate comfort zone: In this zone, individuals are allowed into our most personal space. This typically reects emotional closeness that involves skin contact, such as a hug from a parent, friend, spouse, or child, and represents a surrounding distance of 0 to 1.5 feet (0 to 0.5 meters). Personal comfort zone: This zone ranges from 1.5 to 4 feet (0.5 to 1.5 meters). This zone represents the space where most of our conversations with family, friends, and colleagues occur. When people we do not know well enter this zone, or when anyone comes into closer proximity to us than our personal preference, we may feel uncomfortable because our personal space has been invaded. Personal comfort zone is dependent on the culture of the individual. Women tend to stand in closer proximity to others than men.14,15 Social comfort zone: Our comfort zone in social contexts is approximately 4 to 12 feet (1.5 to 3.5 meters). Group interactions typically occur within this space. Public comfort zone: This zone exceeds 12 feet (3.5 meters) Many public speakers and instructors position themselves within this zone. Communication Safety Alert
Think of proxemics when you interact with patients. You enter their intimate and personal comfort zones each time you approach them to provide nursing care. Let patients know you plan to enter their personal comfort zone prior to touching them. You have to let patients know you plan to touch them by indirectly asking permission. For example, if you say I need to check your blood pressure now, this is preparing patients prior to touching them. Before you enter a personal comfort zone, you need to warn the patient. In contrast, you would not just walk into a room and lift up the patients gown to do an abdominal assessment without letting the patient know what you plan to do. This professional behavior promotes development of a trusting nurse-patient relationship.
Touch: Whether through a welcoming handshake with a friend or holding the patients hand during an invasive procedure, the use of touch is a nonverbal expression of appreciation, acceptance, emotional support, encouragement, and praise when done appropriately. Because touch is also a behavior of sexual intimacy, there are legalities and social norms for interpersonal and professional touch behavior.
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Rather, meeting the individidual in person for a face-to-face discussion may be a better choice. When giving directions to someone who has never been to your house, it may be best to write them down or send them as a text message. Once messages are conveyed through a channel, we need to understand the process of listening and then know how to respond effectively to what others say. Through purposeful listening and patient-safe listening responses, we can increase our ability to negotiate common meaning with others and interpret the meaning in messages as intended.
Hearing is only the rst stage of the listening process. The listening process is interactive because it includes providing feedback to the speaker through listening responses that convey our understanding of the message. The listening responses are verbal and nonverbal messages sent to the other communicator. Through listening responses, interpretations of messages can be claried and veried to achieve the highest probability that messages are understood as intended. High-level communicators understand that listening responses are vital to creating common meaning and shared understanding between communicators. The way individuals respond to messages with feedback reveals if they are really listening and processing what is said and how they are interpreting messages. Effective listening responses provide the necessary feedback to the speaker that indicate if the message is understood as intended or if the message needs to be corrected and claried to ensure the creation of common meaning. The most accurately stated message delivered through a carefully selected channel will not be effective if the receiver does not respond with feedback using effective listening responses. Because the listening process involves interpretation and feedback to confirm the meaning of the message, listening responsively is often referred to as active listening. There are several risk factors that create interference and block the ability to listen and respond effectively to messages, thereby hindering creation of common meaning between communicators. These factors must be recognized and overcome, as they can lead to communication breakdowns, miscommunications, and frustration in personal and professional relationships.
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Showing disapproval: Statements such as Why are you getting so angry? Theres no reason for it express disapproval. These statements belittle peoples feelings and may yield shame. You do not have to agree with others; rather, convey a willingness to listen to anothers viewpoint, then agree to disagree on the topic. Challenging statements: When you ask an individual a question that begins with why, you are attacking the person and putting him or her on the defensive. Consider this question, Why are you not taking your medications? This sounds accusatory and laden with your judgment that the patient has done something wrong. Rather, ask the question this way, I see that you are not taking your medications. Could you tell me more about this? Try to ask questions that begin with who, what, where, when, and how instead of why. Giving false reassurance: This includes comments such as, It is probably nothing or I am sure the tests will show nothing abnormal. These clichs are attempts to pretend everything is ne and to cover up emotions. False reassurance denies individuals the ability to express their emotions and concerns and can violate the trust between nurse and patient. Minimizing the situation: Similar to false reassurance, minimizing includes responses such as, Its just some blood tests or Its not so bad. These responses deny the individual the right to express concerns and fears and invalidate the extent of the emotions the individual may be feeling. Imposing guilt: Do not make people feel guilty about their emotions, concerns, and fears. Imagine a nurse responding to a crying patient by saying, You need to compose yourself. You know how important it is to be strong. Think of your family. The patient was feeling vulnerable; now the patient is also feeling guilt. Giving advice: Giving advice proclaims your lack of faith in the ability of others to think for themselves and make their own decisions. You imply you are the only one who knows what is best. Giving advice denies individuals the ability to become selfdirecting agents in managing issues, problem solving, and coping. Reacting with defensiveness: Responding defensively means you are taking something personally. Your response may sound like an attack on another. For example, the patient states, One of the staff members stole my purse. You respond, I highly doubt anyone in this hospital would steal your purse. You are being both defensive and confrontational. In both your personal and professional life, it is important to avoid feedback that blocks communication. The next section of the chapter focuses on patient-safe communication strategies that are active and effective listening responses that facilitate high-level communication.
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to make sense of a message. Nurses then validate the intended meaning of the message through active listening responses that provide feedback to patients that they understand the intended message. Paraphrasing Paraphrasing is feedback that restates, in your own words, the message you thought a communicator sent. The following narrative shows the effects of paraphrasing in the communication situation: PATIENT: I am really tired of all the blood they are taking from me. They are poking me every 4 hours. PARAPHRASING RESPONSE: It sounds like you are frustrated with all of these blood tests and this is hurting you. Paraphrasing draws out more information from the individual and can add a deeper understanding of what the underlying issues really are: PATIENT: Well, you are sort of right, I guess. I want to go home so I can be with my family, not be here and constantly pinched and prodded. Its making me angry.
Listening With Silence Through purposeful active listening with silence, we can show our concern and support by giving people uninterrupted time to collect their thoughts and consider how they want to express their thoughts. Even through silence, we are communicating a response to a message. Questioning Listeners respond by questioning when they need additional information to understand the message. This includes closed-ended and open-ended questions. Closed-ended questions require a factual response that is answered with a yes, no, or maybe. For example, Would you say that your breathing has improved following your ventolin treatment? In contrast, openended questions facilitate verbal and nonverbal explanation of facts, thoughts, and feelings. Such questions cannot be answered with a yes or no. For example, How was your ventolin treatment? is open-ended, requiring the expression of thoughts about the treatment. Empathy Empathy is dened as the ability to experience the feelings of another individual from that individuals own unique perspective.8 It provides an understanding that is more than verbal acknowledgement of the feelings of another. It is an opportunity to step into someone elses shoes for a time to experience the emotions of another. There are signicant positive outcomes of using empathy during interpersonal communications. For the person receiving empathy, there is an increase in self-esteem by knowing that the other communicator is actively listening and is willing to accept personal thoughts and feelings without any evaluations or judgments. The person feels not only heard but understood, and a deeper sense of trust develops. Patients express clues subtly about their desire to discuss their emotions during interactions with health-care providers. A study by Levinson, Gorawara-Bhat, and
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Lamb19 demonstrated that when physicians missed opportunities to offer an empathetic response, patients offered clues repeatedly. When their needs for having their feelings acknowledged empathetically were not met, patients searched for a new physician. Studies reveal that empathetic communication improves patient health outcomes,20 increases compliance with treatment,21 and increases provider and patient satisfaction.22,23 To offer empathy effectively: 1. Recognize the presence of a patients strong feelings in the clinical setting (i.e., fear, anger, grief, disappointment) 2. Imagine how the patient might be feeling 3. State your perception of the patients feeling (i.e., I can imagine that must be.... or It sounds like youre upset about....) 4. Legitimize the feeling: Its alright to feel angry right now.... 5. Respect the patients effort to cope with the predicament 6. Offer support and partnership (i.e., Im committed to work with you to.... or Lets see what we can do together to....) Summarizing Summarizing provides the opportunity to review and validate the major points within the communication situation. For example, it can be used as a patient-safe strategy when providing patient education. Today, we reviewed what you can expect before, during, and after surgery. Is there anything we missed or anything else you would like to talk about? Supportive Statements Supportive statements include an agreement with the communicators perspective: I think you are on the right track here. In addition, supportive statements include offering to help, such as, I am here if you need to talk. Analytical Statements Responding with an analytical statement means you offer an interpretation of the individuals message. The goal of using analytical statements is to help individuals see a situation within a broader perspective and with greater objectivity. An analytical statement may be transformational and help individuals consider meanings in situations they may not have thought of from their own perspective. I think what you are really saying is.... or Maybe what is really going on is.... Evaluative Statements Evaluative statements are used to offer encouragement as well as constructive feedback, such as Look how well you are walking todaygood for you! Evaluative statements that provide constructive feedback can promote patient safety. Everything looked good when you were drawing up your own insulin. I just got the sense that we may need to work on your understanding of why you draw up short-acting insulin rst. Lets try it again and have you talk through it as if you were teaching me. Always start constructive feedback with a positive statement, and then introduce an objective observation of behavior that reveals an opportunity for improvement.
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exists.24 There are several factors to take into consideration when selecting an appropriate response: Think about the context of the situation. At times it is best to be encouraging and supportive; at other times you may need to offer an analysis of the situation. Think about individual people. Can they come to their own solutions through paraphrasing and open questioning, or do they need more analytical responses? Can they accept constructive feedback? Think about your own comfort and skill when making selections. In nursing, you will need to develop skill in each of the patient-safe active listening responses to negotiate meaning effectively, appropriately, and sensitively within a wide range of patient situations. CHAPTER SUMMARY This chapter focused on sending, receiving, and responding to messages to attain the highest level of probability in achieving common meaning and shared understanding between communicators. Specically, the chapter described how communicators use verbal language and nonverbal behaviors to convey messages and choose a specic channel and how they use the listening process to interpret and validate the intended meaning of messages through patient-safe active listening responses. Nurses must overcome factors that pose risk to listening, such as physiological factors, information overload, brain processing, and physical noise, through patient-safe facilitative active listening responses.
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BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Reective Practice. Reflective practice is a self-regulating, active process of stepping back and witnessing ones own experience, then examining the experience in greater depth. Think about and write a one-page summary of a recent communication situation that did not go as you had planned. Explain the verbal language used in the message, the means to convey the message, and listening responses. Specify what you will do differently the next time a similar situation occurs. 2. Communication Practice. Work with a classmate to complete the following activities: a. Sit with your backs to each other. Tell your partner how to get from your education institution to your home using the communication process and listening responses to negotiate mutual understanding. As you provide the directions, your partner will draw a map. At the end of the exercise, look at the map, and determine its accuracy. b. Are you aware of your personal comfort zone? Work with your partner to determine your personal space. How close do you usually stand to someone when you converse with him or her? c. Communicate a story to your partner using nonverbal behavior only. 3. Critical Thinking a. Paraphrase the following statement, You make me so mad when you leave the bathroom a mess. b. A patient states the following during the health history, My asthma is getting the best of me and my enjoyment of life. I really feel that I am missing so much in life. You recognize the strong feelings of the patient. What type of response would be prudent in this situation? 4. Critical Thinking. What are the words and nonverbal behaviors a nurse may use to obtain personal health information from patients? Why is it important that nurses negotiate common meaning with patients?
References
1. Beebe, S.A., Beebe, S.J., Redmond, M.V., et al. Interpersonal Communication, 4th ed. Toronto, Ontario, Pearson Education Canada: 2007. 2. Grifn, K., Patton, B.R. Fundamentals of Interpersonal Communication, 2nd ed. N.Y., Harper & Row: 1976. 3. Weaver, R.L. Understanding Interpersonal Communication. 7th ed. N.Y., Addison-Wesley: 1996. 4. Levinson, S.C. Pragmatics. Cambridge, England, Cambridge University: 1983. 5. DeVito, J.A. The Interpersonal Communication Book, 11th ed. Boston, Pearson Education, Allyn and Bacon: 2007. 6. Mehrabian, A. Silent Messages: Implicit Communication of Emotions and Attitudes, 2nd ed. Belmont, Calif., Wadsworth Publishing: 1981.
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7. Sapir, E., The Unconscious Patterning of Behavior in Society. In Mandelbaum, D., ed. Selected Writings of Edward Sapir in Language, Culture, and Personality. Berkeley, Calif., University of California Press: 1949, p. 556. 8. Adler, R.B., Rosenfeld, L.B., Proctor, R.F., et al. Interplay: The Process of Interpersonal Communication. Don Mills, Ontario, Oxford University Press: 2006. 9. Ekman, P., Friesen, W.V., Tomkins, S.S. Facial Affect Scoring Technique (FAST): A First Validity Study. Semiotica 3:37-38, 1971. 10. Ekman, P., Friesen, W.V. Unmasking the Face. A Guide to Recognizing Emotions From Facial Clues. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall: 1975. 11. Mehrabian, A. Nonverbal Communication. Chicago, Aldine-Atherton: 1972. 12. Thourlby, W. You Are What You Wear. N.Y., New American Library: 1978. 13. Hall, E.T. The Hidden Dimension. Garden City, N.Y., Anchor: 1969. 14. Sommer, R. Studies in Personal Space. Sociometry 22:247-260, 1959. 15. Knapp, M.L., Hall, J.A. Nonverbal Communication in Human Interaction, 3rd ed, Fort Worth Tex., Holt, Rinehart and Winston: 1992. 16. Steil, L.K. Listening Training: The Key to Success in Todays Organizations. In Purdy, M., Borisoff, D., eds. Listening in Everyday life: A Personal and Professional Approach, 2nd ed. Lanham Md., University Press of America: 1996, pp. 213-237. 17. Versfeld, N.J., Dreschler, W.A. The Relationship Between the Intelligibility of Time-Compressed Speech and Speech-In-Noise in Young and Elderly Listeners. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 111:401-408, 2002. 18. Iveson-Iveson, J. The Art of Communication. Nursing Mirror 156:47, 1983. 19. Levinson, W., Gorawara-Bhat, R., Lamb, J. A Study of Patient Clues and Physician Responses in Primary Care and Surgical Settings. Journal of the American Medical Association 284:1021-1027, 2000. 20. Stewart, MA. Effective Physician-Patient Communication and Health Outcomes: A Review. Canadian Medical Association Journal 152:1423-1433, 1995. 21. Stewart, MA. What Is a Successful Doctor-Patient Interview? A Study of Interactions and Outcomes. Social Science and Medicine 19:167-175, 1984. 22. Suchman, A.L., Roter, D., Green, M., et al.: Physician Satisfaction With Primary Care Ofce Visits. Collaborative Study Group of the American Academy on Physicians and Patients. Medical Care 31:10831092, 1993. 23. Brody, D.S., Miller, S.M., Lerman, C.E., et al.: The Relationship Between Patients Satisfaction With Their Physicians and Perceptions About Interventions They Desired and Received. Medical Care 27:1027-1035, 1989. 24. Burleson, B.R. Comforting Messages: Features, Functions and Outcomes. In Daly, J.A., Wienmann, J.M., eds. Strategic Interpersonal Communication. Hillsdale, N.J., Lawrence Erlbaum: 1994, pp. 135-161.
CHAPTER
Key Words
Culture Gender Ethnicity Cultural value Cultural belief Spirituality
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n this chapter, you will learn the importance of assessing the patients cultural beliefs and practices and gender differences in communication. Both will affect the patient-safe strategies needed to devise, implement, and evaluate plans of care for patients in health-care settings. This chapter expands upon the context ring of the Transformational Model of Communication and the importance of recognizing and working within appropriate contexts to have the best chance of successful transformational outcomes in health care. Review the context ring of the Transformational Model of Communication in Chapter 2. Health-care providers must be resourceful and creative to tailor interventions to suit the patients culture.1 They must respect differences and appreciate the inherent worth of diverse cultures.2 Patient-safe, culturally competent communication is required in order to have the best chance of negotiating common meaning for all aspects of patient care management. The rst step in becoming a patient-safe, culturally competent nurse is to become aware of, and reect upon, your own values, attitudes, and beliefs. The second step is to assess the patients cultural values, attitudes, and beliefs. You analyze how they are alike or different from your own in order to develop your awareness and increase your cultural sensitivity. The more culturally sensitive you become, the better able you will be to negotiate common meaning with your patients and prevent miscommunications that may lead to harmful events. For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com You may be surprised to learn that the 20 value statements listed online have been derived from the culture of North Americans. L. Robert Kohls,3 past Executive Director of The Washington International Center and current Director of International Programs at San Francisco State University, has developed a guide intended to explain to a foreigner the verbal and nonverbal behaviors of Americans, actions which might otherwise appear to be strange, confusing, or unbelievable, when evaluated from the perspective of the foreigners own society and its values.3 We need to take a look at ourselves from the perspective of foreigners, so that we can get to know who we are and how our own values have a direct impact on our communications and the safe and effective delivery of patient care.
Change
In North America, change is seen as good and is linked to progress and growth.3 In contrast, patients with traditional values who want to hold onto traditions consider change to be disruptive and destructive and will avoid change in favor of stability, continuity, and
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heritage. With many illnesses, behavioral change is needed, and this creates conict for many individuals who do not want to change their lifestyles.
Equality
For North Americans, there is a belief that all people are created equal, which reects a religious basis, that God views all humans alike without regard to intelligence, physical characteristics, or economic status. In those from traditional cultures, rank, status, and authority are more desirable to promote a sense of order, security, and certainty. They nd it reassuring to know who they are and where they t into society.3 Patients from traditional backgrounds may treat physicians and nurses with deferential manners and high respect, because they view them as authority gures. Traditional views may inhibit patients from viewing themselves as integral parts of the health-care team.
Self-Help
Closely related to individualism is the idea of self-help. In the English language, there are more than 100 words about doing things for ones self,3 These words include selfconfidence, self-conscious, self-contented, self-control, self-discipline, self-expression,
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and so on. Most other languages do not contain the equivalent words containing self.3 In nursing, there is emphasis placed on self-care. Nurses may assume that all patients want to perform their own care so that they can regain their independence. Those with traditional values may be perfectly content to have others make decisions and manage their care.
Future Orientation
North Americans value the future and the improvements the future will bring.3 They devalue the past and do not dwell on past events.3 Even a happy present time may go largely unnoticed because North Americans are hopeful the future will bring even greater happiness. In some patients from traditional cultures, talking about or planning the future is felt to be futile if they believe fate controls their destiny and there is nothing that can be done. Traditional cultures live for the present and value the past.3 Viewed through the values of North American health-care providers, past orientation and belief in fate can make traditional patients appear to be superstitious, lazy, and unwilling to take the initiative to bring about improvements. Instead, if nurses recognize the past orientation, they need to focus on planning with patients by taking one day at a time.
Informality
North Americans are very informal and casual.3 For example, bosses urge their employees to call them by their rst names and feel uncomfortable being called Mr. or Mrs. To those of other cultures, this informality may be unsettling and considered disrespectful and insulting.3 Nurses need to nd out how their patients prefer to be addressed, and
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let patients decide how they want to address nurses. Patients may feel more comfortable calling their nurse Mr. or Mrs. instead of by a rst name. In addition, it is very important that nurses present a professional image through professional dress and manners, further described in Unit 2.
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CULTURAL ASSESSMENT
The only way to deliver culturally competent care is by using high-level communication competency to assess culture and determine the impact of the recommended plan of treatment on the values and beliefs of the patient and family. Box 5.1 is a cultural assessment used in health-care settings based on the work of Purnell and Paulanka.4,5
BOX 5.1 Cultural Assessment Heritage: What is the patients country of origin? Is the patient familiar with the health-care system and health-care providers in this country? Communication: Are there language barriers? Will the patient feel comfortable sharing his thoughts and feelings? Family Roles and Organization: Who is the dominant member of the household, the person in the family who is the spokesperson and decision maker? Biocultural Ecology: What are the specic genetic or environmentally transmitted diseases that cause health problems in the different cultural groups? High-Risk Behaviors: Does the cultural group use tobacco, alcohol, or recreational drugs? Is participation in high-risk physical activities common? Is there a lack of adherence to important health safety practices? Nutrition: What are the basic ingredients of native food dishes and preparation practices? Pregnancy and Childbearing Practices: What are the preferences for birth control methods, the roles of men in childbirth, the positions for delivering a baby, and the preferred types of health practitioners (male or female, midwife or obstetrician)? Death Rituals: What is the patients view of death, dying, and the afterlife? Spirituality: What is the patients dominant religion and views regarding the meaning and purpose of life? Health-Seeking Beliefs and Behaviors: What are the patients beliefs about pain, mental and physical handicaps, chronic illness, and folklore practices?
GENDER
It is necessary to understand the impact of gender in interpersonal relationships and health care.6 Gender differences in communication are partially derived from cultural backgrounds. The purpose of recognizing gender differences in styles of communication is to understand ourselves and members of the opposite sex, and to apply this knowledge to facilitate communication between men and women and to increase the probability of negotiating and creating common meaning. You must be able to assess each persons genderspecic verbal and nonverbal communications and then adjust your communication to
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have the highest probability of negotiating and creating common meaning with patients and other health-care providers.
In addition to cultural differences in gender communications, there are also biological inuences.
Biological Inuences
Although brain research is still in its infancy, neurologists suggest that there are structural and chemical differences in the brains of men and women.7-9 Biological theories suggest these differences inuence human verbal and nonverbal behavior. Research indicates that female brains are less lateralized during speech. Women use both sides of the brain, whereas men use primarily the left side of the brain, regardless of whether they are right-handed or left-handed.9 In addition, mens brains are inuenced by the hormone testosterone, whereas womens brains are primarily inuenced by the hormones oxytocin, estrogen, and progesterone.7,8,10,11 These hormones inuence sexual development and verbal and nonverbal behavior. For example, male bodies produce 10 to 40 times more testosterone than do female bodies.10 Research suggests that aggressive behaviors may be linked to hormonal abnormalities and that men with higher-than-average testosterone levels exhibit a wide variety of antisocial behaviors.7
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It will take many more years to sort out the biological and cultural differences in communication. In the meantime, researchers agree that men and women have different verbal and nonverbal styles of speech.7,12-17 Your personal experiences communicating with members of the opposite sex may have already led you to the conclusion that differences do exist in communication patterns, although you may not have recognized and classied them.
If you realize, in health-care situations, that many women make small talk to establish rapport, even if you personally prefer a more direct or technical approach to a conversation, you become better able to understand the purpose of the other persons conversational style. In addition, it is interesting to note that in terms of total talking time observed in conversations, men spend more time talking than women.14,15 Report talk is characteristic of male language.12,13 Men generally prefer a style of language that involves freely announcing and stating facts to give an account, with a skip-the-details approach.12,13 In contrast to the speech style of many women, the
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purpose of the report style of speech for many men is to assert independence and to maintain or increase status in social groups.12,13
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nonlistening behaviors that will break down relationships. Thus, women and men may be mutually dissatised with the arrangement of women typically listening and men typically providing information.12,13 Many women are more inclined to give listening responses, murmuring yes as encouragement for the speaker to continue and nodding the head to provide feedback and encourage a relationship. In contrast, men typically focus on the message and its literal meanings and will say what they mean in return. Therefore, men say yes and nod only if they agree.12,13 Women also tend to ask more questions than men to encourage further verbal expressions. Women may attempt to draw quieter members of a group into a conversation, whereas men may assume that anyone who has something to say will volunteer it.20
Storytelling
Most people, regardless of gender, like to tell stories. Storytelling involves exchanging accounts of personal experiences. The stories that women tell tend to revolve around relationships. Women prefer to tell stories of peculiar people and dramatize abnormal behavior.12,13 Men typically like to tell stories of human contests.12,13 They tell stories of how they acted alone and report a happy outcome in an adventure in which they came out on top. By listening to patients stories, you can help distract them from their problems. Other patient-safe communication interventions involving storytelling include reminiscence and life review, in which the patient recalls and talks about past life experiences. Through reminiscence and life reviews, patients learn to deal with crises and losses, prevent and reduce depression, and increase life satisfaction.21,22
Tag Questions
Women tend to ask more questions than men, commonly in the form of tag questions.12,13The speaker adds a phrase at the end of a statement that turns it into a question: Id like to go out to eatwouldnt you? Women may use this form to hear the others thoughts on the subject and encourage the expression of opinions. If the woman
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specically wants to go out to dinner, however, she should make a statement such as, Id like to go out to dinner tonight. The danger of tag questions is that the other person, especially a man, not aware of the purpose of the tag question, may answer with a personal opinion such as Id rather stay in tonight. If he had known that the speaker really wanted to go out, he might have gone along happily. Men are sometimes prone to respond more literally to questions and, therefore, may misinterpret some forms of questions.12,13 Another phrase used as a tag is, What do you think? The purpose is to make others feel involved and obtain opinions before making a decision. A problem occurs, however, if the person to whom the tag question is directed interprets this to mean, Make the decision for me. The tag question may give the impression that the speaker lacks the condence to make the decision. Many women also ask why questions more often than men. They seek an explanation, perhaps in an attempt to understand the others thoughts on the subject. The net effect of tag questions during conversations is that women may appear less intelligent or more uncertain.12,13
Conversational Rituals
Many women aim to be liked by peers, so in addition to tag questions they use conversational rituals. The rituals of women focus on establishing symmetrical connections in relationships because of a need to be closely affiliated with peers. Many women attempt to maintain equality, make other people feel comfortable, look closely at the effects of conversations on a persons verbal and nonverbal behaviors, and maintain attention to details.12,13 For example, many women say Im sorry as a way of showing empathy and restoring balance to a conversation, not intending it to mean that they did something wrong. To some men, the woman who uses this phrase often may appear powerless.12,13 Another ritual for many women is use of the word thanks, tacked on to the end of a conversation, although there may be nothing specic to be thankful about. It is seen as a way of showing concern for others feelings or work and also as thanking others for their time. A man may wonder, Why is she thanking me? 12,13 A third ritual used by women is giving praise through compliments.12,13 Women offer more compliments than men, and they give far more compliments to other women than they do to men. By so doing, they are attempting to promote group harmony. Men also use conversational rituals, many of which relate to status. Male rituals involve joking, sarcasm, teasing, and playful put-downs.12,13 To men, joking and teasing are
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part of the contest for status and a way of getting attention from others. Joking and teasing may also help avoid confronting an issue in an open manner. Women typically tell fewer jokes than men and often do not nd teasing, sarcasm, and put-downs funny.12,13
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consideration to form trusting interpersonal relationships, plan and implement care, and prevent patient harm. There will be differences in the selection of treatment modalities and the management of treatment plans based on your accurate assessment and understanding of the impact of cultural and gender values, attitudes, and practices of each patient. Health-care providers need to learn to conduct a cultural and gender context assessment and then analyze and solve health-care problems of patients and their family members from the patients cultural and gender contextual perspective.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Cultural Self-Assessment. Complete the brief cultural assessment below to help yourself become aware of your own cultural values, attitudes, and practices and how these affect your communication with patients and families. After you answer the questions, ask the questions of your parents and, if possible, your grandparents. Compare and contrast your answers with those of your classmates. To what culture and ethnic groups do you belong? In what country were you born? In what country were your ancestors born? (From what country or continent does your family originate?) Do you follow any traditions passed down to your generation? Give examples. What holidays do you celebrate, and what do you eat? Whom do you consider family members? In your family, who takes care of infants and children? In your family, who stays home from work and takes care of family members when they are sick? How are decisions made in your family? Where are your most elderly family members living? What happens to family members when they die? Who does what tasks in your family, such as preparing meals, cleaning the house, doing yard work? How important is it to be punctual? Is the gender of a baby important? Are girl and boy infants treated differently? What rules govern sexual activity for a man? a woman? 2. Critical Thinking. Give examples of communication strategies to use when a male nurse is assigned to give care to an 85-year-old female patient with severe arthritis, or when a female nurse is assigned to give care to an 85-yearold male patient with severe arthritis. How would you engage the patient?
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References
1. McFarland, M., Wehbe-Alamah, H., Andrews, M., et al. Indigenous Transcultural Nursing Knowledge Discovered in a Metasynthesis of Culture Care Research Findings. Proceedings From 34th Annual Conference of the Transcultural Nursing Society, Sept. 24-27, 2008, Minneapolis, Minn. 2. Murphy, S.C. Mapping the Literature of Transcultural Nursing. Journal of the Medical Library Association. 94: E143-E151, 2006. Located at http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1463039 Accessed October 2008. 3a. Kohls, R.L. Why Do Americans Act Like That? A Guide to Understand the U.S. Culture and its Values. Dr. L. Robert Kohls, Director of International Programs at San Francisco State University. Located at http://www.uku./~paganuzz/xcult/values/Amer_values.htm Accessed October, 2008. 3b. Kohls, L.R. The Values Americans Live By. Located at http://web1.msue.msu.edu/intext/global/ americanvalues.pdf Accessed October, 2008. 4. Purnell, L.D., Paulanka, B.J. Transcultural Health Care: A Culturally Competent Approach, 3rd ed. Philadelphia, F.A. Davis: 2008. 5. Purnell, L.D. Guide to Culturally Competent Health Care, 2nd ed. Philadelphia, F.A. Davis: 2009. 6. World Health Organization. Gender, Women, and Health. Located at http://www.who.int/gender/en/ Accessed October, 2008. 7. Brannon, L: Gender: Psychological Perspectives, 5th ed. Boston, Allyn & Bacon: 2007. 8. Moir, A., Jessel, D. Brain Sex: The Real Difference Between Men and Women. Seacaucus, N.J., Carole Publishing Group: 1991. 9. Gorski, R.A. Sexual Differentiation of the Endocrine Brain and Its Control Brain Endocrinology, ed 2. N.Y.,Raven Press: 1991. 10. Lehne, R.A. Pharmacology for Nursing Care, ed 4. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders: 2006. 11. Gerlach, P.K. Gender and Communication: Typical Female/Male Differences in Priorities. Located at http://sfhelp.org/02/gender.htm Accessed October, 2008 . 12. Tannen, D. You Just Dont Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. N.Y.,Quill, Harper/Collins: 2001. 13. Tannen, D. Cant We Talk? Condensed from You Just Dont Understand. Located at http://raysweb.net/ poems/articles/tannen.html Accessed October, 2008. 14. Hyde, J.S. Half the Human Experience: The Psychology of Women, 7th ed. Boston, Houghton-Mifin: 2007. 15. Hyde, J.S. New Directions in the Study of Gender Similarities and Differences. Current Directions in Psychological Science 1:259-263, 2007. 16. Hyde, J.S., DeLamater, J.D.: Understanding Human Sexuality, 10th ed. N.Y., McGraw-Hill: 2008. 17. Else-Quest, N.M., Hyde, J.S., Goldsmith, H.H., et al. Gender Differences in Temperament: A Meta-Analysis. Psychological Bulletin 132:33-72, 2006. 18. Trossman, S. The Human Connection: Nurses and Their Patients. The American Nurse 30:1, 1998. 19. Lever, J. Sex Differences in the Complexity of Childrens Play and Games. American Sociological Review 43:471, 1978. 20. Glass, L. He Says, She Says: Closing the Communication Gap Between the Sexes. N.Y., Perigree Books, Putnam Publishing Group: 1993. 21. Burnside, I., Haight, B. Reminiscence and Life Review: Therapeutic Interventions for Older People. Nurse Practitioner 19:55, 1994. 22. Schweitzer, P., Bruce, E. Remembering Yesterday, Caring Today: Reminiscence in Dementia Care: A Guide to Good Practice. London, Jessica Kingsley Publishers: 2008. 23. Glass, L. I Know What Youre Thinking: Using the Four Codes of Reading People to Improve Your Life. Hoboken, N.J., John Wiley & Sons: 2003. 24. Aries, E: Gender and Communication. In Shaver, P., Hendrick, C. (eds.): Sex and Gender. Newbury Park, Calif., Sage: 1987, pp 149-176. 25. Verbrugge, L.M. Gender and Health: An Update on Hypotheses and Evidence. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 26:156, 1985. 26. Verbrugge, L.M. The Twain Meet: Empirical Explanations of Sex Differences in Health and Mortality. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 30:282, 1989.
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Nurse-Patient Communication: Patient-Safe Communication in Professional Relationships
CHAPTER
Key Terms
Preorientation phase Orientation phase Working phase Termination phase Patient-safe communication process Professional identity management Stress Blamer Placator Computer Distractor Assertivenss
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he developing nurse communicator must now transition from understanding the basics of communication and interpersonal relationships into the high-level communication competency needed to develop and maintain the nurse-patient relationship. For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com. You can complete an assessment of your current style of communication in relationships. This chapter describes the high-level communication competency needed in nurse-patient relationships. In nurse-patient relationships, nurses attempt to develop collaborative relationships with patients, patient families, and legal guardians to establish mutual health-care goals and objectives. The nurse-patient relationship always includes the patient and will also include the legal guardians if the patient is younger than 18 or is otherwise unable to make decisions due to the nature of the health state. There are four phases of the nurse-patient relationship, as detailed in Box 6.1.
BOX 6.1 Phases of the Nurse-Patient Relationship The nurse-patient relationship is a helping relationship.1 The nurse must understand the phases of helping relationships in order to communicate effectively with patients and family members or guardians. Peplau described the phases as preinteraction, orientation, working, and termination. Preinteraction occurs prior to meeting a patient; the nurse reviews available data on the patient to anticipate health needs and formulate a preliminary plan of care. During orientation, the nurse and patient meet and get to know each other. This phase begins as an interpersonal relationship that lays the foundation for a nurse-patient relationship. Social greetings are followed by focusing on the reason for the need for patient care. The patient must be informed about what to expect and when the relationship will be terminated. The patients problems and goals must be prioritized in collaboration with the nurse. Next is the working phase, where the patient and nurse work together to attain mutual goals. Last is the termination phase, focused on a smooth transition as care is passed to other caregivers. The nurse and patient evaluate goal achievement during the time they have worked together. The nurse reminds the patient ahead of time that he or she is leaving soon and then says goodbye.
High-level communication competency behaviors include communication knowledge, skill, and motivation.2 Communication knowledge means knowing what behavior is best suited for a given situation. Communication skill is having the ability to apply the behavior in the given context. Communication motivation is having the desire to communicate in a highly competent manner.
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communication. The Patient-Safe Communication Process is derived from the transformational model, which is a model of communicating competently, with practical application to nurse-patient relationships as shown in Figure 6.1. The Patient-Safe Communication Process takes into account the many variables that are risk factors for effective communication and the coordination of complex, interdependent, and dynamic activities required for effective communication to take place. In nurse-patient relationships, nurses and patients simultaneously send and receive messages and perform numerous perceptual, cognitive, and behavioral activities requiring communication to prevent harm to patients. Communication Safety Alert
Nurses must strive to produce accurate messages through deliberate choices, monitor the emotions and reactions of patients, interpret the rapid stream of information, adjust choices to meet the situation, respond to changes in context, and preserve intended health goals and objectives as they collaborate with patients in an attempt to attain positive transformations.3
Communicators identify human need that must be met and determine desired effect and communication outcome goal
Critical Thinking in Communication Deliberate thought process of collecting interpreting, analyzing, and drawing conclusions about how to achieve the desired communication outcomes Includes decision making and problem solving
Assess Communicators Context of the communication situation Communication risk factors Plan Determine communication strategies to overcome risk factors Choose the words that will convey the intended meaning Select the best channel Implement Convey the message Obtain validation feedback Evaluate Observe effects Messages understood as intended Common meaning created
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The nurse-patient relationship owchart in Figure 6.2 contrasts nurse-patient communications that result in collaboration compared to those that result in conict between the nurse and patient. If communication is not effective, conict develops over health goals and objectives, and the amount of shared information will decrease, thereby increasing the likelihood of harmful events. As shown in the flowchart, the nurse goes into a patient care situation with a preconceived set of goals and objectives that the nurse believes need to be achieved for an optimal health outcome. Likewise, the patient has a set of goals and objectives that she believes must be achieved for an optimal health outcome. These goals and objectives may not be the same. During your rst and subsequent encounters with a patient, you will communicate to establish mutual goals and objectives regarding patient care needs. Differing ideas about
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Goals, objectives, and expectations based on past experience and current needs
Goals, objectives, and expectations based on past experience and current needs
Patient-safe communication
Ineffective communication
Needs recognized
Stress response
Conflicting relationship
the goals and objectives and disagreement regarding needs leads to conict between the nurse and patient. Consequently, you and the patient will feel stress. For example, suppose your goal is to prevent the complications of immobility for an elderly patient in a nursing home. You go into his room to get him out of bed for breakfast. The patient acts very sleepy and says, I do not want to get up. Let me sleep. You know that trays are coming in 20 minutes and that the patient is scheduled to be in physical therapy in an hour. You feel stress because you and the patient are not in agreement, and you need to establish a collaborative relationship with the patient. Use the patient-safe communication process as follows: 1. Assess the communicator to identify human needs: this person wants sleep, which is a very basic physical need. 2. Identify conicting goals: patient wants to sleep; you want him up for physical therapy. 3. Respond with the patient-safe strategy of empathy to verify and clarify your assigned meaning to the situation: Empathically say, You are tired today. How did you sleep last night? He responds with, The patient across the hall was making noise all night. 4. Respond with the patient-safe strategy of humor and use a joking tone of voice to say: I guess the staff should have passed out ear plugs last night. 5. Evaluate creation of common meaning: the patient smiles a little and says, You can say that again!
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At this point, you have recognized that the patient has an unmet need for sleep, and you have communicated that you understand his need and attained common meaning. Now you can negotiate a plan for activity and rest, saying: Breakfast trays are coming in 20 minutes, and you have an appointment in Physical Therapy in an hour. Would you like 5 minutes more to sleep now, and then Ill come to get you up? Theres also a period between therapy and lunch when you can take a nap when you get back. Ill hang a do-not-disturb sign on your door if youd like. You must create common meaning that the need for sleep will be met. If you can negotiate mutual understanding and create common meaning in developing a workable plan of action with the patients cooperation, there is increased liklihood of attaining positive health outcomes and positive transformations. Once you negotiate an action plan with the patient, however, you must follow through. You told him he could have a nap, so make sure he gets one. That way, the patient will learn to trust you because you are reliable. This example of the patient-safe communication process: Recognizes differences in patient and nurse expectations Demonstrates the use of verifcation and clarication of messages between the nurse and patient Demonstrates patient-safe strategies to create common meaning and put the patient at ease by establishing a trusting relationship Illustrates how to enlist the patients cooperation in negotiating mutual goals and objectives that will lead to postive transformations Communication Safety Alert
No matter what the activities the nurse hopes to accomplish with the patient, use the patient-safe communication process for the highest probablity of attaining common meaning and positive health transformations.
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Stress, whether physical or emotional, causes the body to respond with a ght-or-ight reaction to the stressor. The theory of stress and seminal research on the ght-or-ight reaction have been credited to the psychologist Hans Selye.5 During the ght-or-ight reaction, hormones are released that increase blood pressure, pulse, and breathing. The pupils dilate, and the palms sweat. A persons perception of environmental events creates stress, which leads to physiological reactions, with emotional and behavioral consequences. This response occurs whenever a persons basic needs are not met. Basic needs that could be threatened during stressful situations have been categorized by Maslow, who developed the classic basic human needs theory.6 He categorized basic human needs as safety and security, love and belonging, self-esteem, and physiological. Some or all of these categories of needs may be threatened as a result of a health problem. In response to stress, people react emotionally and behaviorally. The feelings that accompany the situation are very uncomfortable. The person feels anxious, nervous, and tense; may be irritable; may not sleep well, get headaches, or become nauseated. It is human nature to do something to relieve these feelings of stress and anxiety. For example, the person could talk, laugh, or cry. Communication Safety Alert
It is also important for you to understand your own typical response style when you are under stress. Patient care situations can be very stressful for you, the nurse, as well as for patients and their families.
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Nurses strive to promote optimal physical and emotional positive transformational outcomes. As a nurse, you must know what to say to patients as you administer physical care so that you can also ease the emotional stress the patient feels. Patient care settings are often both physically and emotionally threatening. By easing the patients emotional stress, you enable the patient to cope effectively with the situation and can improve the emotional comfort level.7 When you nd yourself in a difcult communication situation in which emotions are tense, the patient-safe communication process can help facilitate optimal transformational outcomes. Communication Safety Alert Patients feel threatened when they believe they are not understood or when they do not understand what is happening to them, and they react physically and emotionally to the situation. If you fail to communicate effectively to establish a collaborative relationship early in such a situation, patients and families can become very distressed. Any time a patient is acting distressed, you should assume that needs are not being met and use the patient-safe communication process to establish a collaborative relationship. Universal Responses to Stress Virginia Satir has researched and developed a classic theory of four universal communication styles that many people use to respond to stressful situations when their self-esteem is threatened.8,9 You must learn to recognize each of these communication styles in the nurse-patient relationship: blamer, placater, computer, and distracter. Blamer. Imagine you are going into the room of a blamer to complete the morning assessment. You wake the patient gently, but much to your surprise, the patient starts pointing his nger and says loudly, Nobody cares what I want! or You always come to check my blood pressure when Im sleeping. Cant you see Im sleeping? Whats wrong with you? All you did was to wake him to do the morning assessment that had to be done because he had surgery less than 24 hours ago. You never even met him. The blamer uses accusatory you statements, sarcasm, put-downs, expressions of superiority, and loaded words intended to start ghts. The blamer may interrupt, yell, call names, demand, give orders, ignore people, hang up on phone conversations, and walk away when someone is talking. Placater. You go into the next room to ask the patient if she has decided on the rehabilitation center where she would like to be transferred because she needs extensive physical therapy. She had a bad fall and broke her hip. Her family cannot take care of her at home until she can do more for herself. When you ask the question, the patient dgets and picks at her ngernails. With a pleading look in her eyes and a soft voice, she says I do not care . . . er, what do you think? My son wants me to go to Parkside, but my daughter says I should go to Hillsville near her home. Im sorry, but I do not know what to do. The placater has a hard time making decisions, may make numerous apologies, and stumble in coming to the point. The placater is frightened of offending or angering anyone, goes along with others when she or he really does not want to, apologizes for things he or she did not do, decides that he or she cannot do something before trying it, and says yes when he or she really means no. Computer. Out in the hall, you run into the patients son, who when under stress responds in the computer style. You say, Your mother is upset about where she should go for
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rehabilitation. She seems to be torn between the place you believe is best and the place your sister feels is best. He replies with a monotone, matter-of-fact voice, Theres a simple solution to the problem. No rational person would need to get upset about it. The computer does not want to reveal feelings and resists discussing them when asked, usually out of fear that doing so is a sign of weakness. This person is quiet, aloof, reserved, and withdrawn and has difculty responding when others express their feelings. Distracter. Just then, the patients daughter, a distracter, approaches you in the hallway. You explain that her mother is upset about where she should go for rehabilitation. She turns to her brother, points a nger at him, and says, You always want things your way! Then she turns to you with quiet, downcast eyes and says, Whatever Mother wants, I really do not care. There should be an easy answer to the problem. A distracter jumps from one style (blamer, placater, or computer) to another, following random urges about what to say. The distracter talks nervously, making little sense, expending energy but failing to focus on the problem or how to solve it. Some patients are bound in these styles of behavior because they have used them for years to deal with stress and anxiety. When interacting with patients and their families in stressful situations, it is up to you to remain in control to be able to respond effectively and carry out your role. How you present yourself to others as you respond to stressful situations is extremely important. Two very important patient-safe strategies you must use are: assertiveness and management of professional identity.
Assertiveness
As a professional nurse, you must learn to become assertive. The assertive nurse is condent and speaks up, asks for information or cooperation clearly, and can say no to requests without feeling guilty. The assertive nurse makes honest statements that are direct; keeps a relaxed and open posture; maintains direct eye contact, and hand gestures and body movements are slow and relaxed. An assertive nurse can control her or his temper when people get angry and start to yell and asks questions to understand and analyze a situation.10 Using assertiveness as a patient-safe strategy takes practice. We all need to please others, criticize others, defend ourselves, and use our intellect to explain to others and change the subject when appropriate. An assertive person can accomplish all these things. You apologize for something you have done incorrectly or failed to do. When you criticize, you evaluate an act rather than blame the person, and you make suggestions for better future performances. You can show your feelings as you give an explanation. You can also clearly say that you need to change the subject witout confusing the other person as to what you are talking about. To manage the stressful situation described earlier, use a clear, rm, relaxed voice as you summarize the situation as you see it. You could say, Your mother needs to make a decision about where to go for rehabilitation. Lets go discuss with your mother the advantages and disadvantages of each of the places that are suited to meet her needs. She needs support from both of you on whatever she decides. In so doing, this nurse has been assertive, direct, and to the point. In addition, nurses use their appearance, mannerisms, and control of the setting to manage stressful situations. This is known as management of professional identity in the nurse-patient relationship.
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Patients perceive that when a nurse projects a positive professional appearance, it communicates that the nurse cares about herself or himself; therefore, the impression is that he or she will take good care of me.15 In recent years, body adornment, including tattoos and facial and body piercing, have become increasingly popular. Tattoos and body piercing affect professional image negatively and may ultimately affect patient safety because patients may have negative attitudes towards nurses with body adornment. To many, it demeans health cares professional image.16 Research demonstrates that health-care administrators hold similar negative views about people with tattoos.17 Although nurse managers cannot prohibit employees from getting tattoos or body piercings, they can establish dress codes that limit the amount of adornment that employees may display. Courts will uphold dress codes based on valid and nondiscriminatory reasons such as safety concerns, professionalism and business interests.16 A positive rst impression is necessary to establish the nurse-patient relationship. How comfortable will your 80-year-old patient be in telling you of his fear that his medications are incorrect if you enter the room with your tongue and eyebrow pierced? If the patient does not trust you because of his impressions of you, you have effectively blocked communications and silenced the patient. You are no longer able to be patient-safe, and essential patient information may become inaccessible, thereby increasing the patients risk for a harmful event. Use professional appearance as a means to nurture the communication situation and offer the best chance for patients to relate to you with trust and willingness to express their human needs. You will need to follow the dress code of your educational institution and the patient care workplaces. In addition, rst impressions also transmit powerful messages to a nursing manager. For example, you would not wear jeans and a sweatshirt to an interview. This would not be appropriate for the context of the situation and would not cast the professional image of a nurse you want to portray. A well-dressed appearance tends to convey a higher level of knowledge and a sincere interest in advancement. A disheveled worker, on the other hand, gives the impression of being a disinterested, marginal performer.18 Setting We also manage identity through our choice of setting, which refers to the physical realm we use to inuence others. In interpersonal relationships, setting includes, for example, the way we decorate our apartment or home. In nursing, it refers to the privacy we create for the patient when we are conducting a health history, obtaining informed consent, or performing an invasive procedure. Our ability to manipulate the setting is needed to create a safe, condential environment. For example, nurses knock before entering a room and pull privacy curtains around the patient prior to performing procedures. CHAPTER SUMMARY Derived from the Transformational Model of Communication, the Patient-Safe Communication Process is described as an instrument for patient safety used to create trusting and collaborative relationships with patients and families in successful nurse-patient relationships. Failure to establish trust and collaboration will result in stress and conict in the nurse-patient relationship. High-level communication competency involves the use of the Patient-Safe Communication Process, which includes assessing the patient, the context,
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and the risk factors; identifying the communication needs, goals, and desired outcomes; planning the message; implementing patient-safe communications strategies, and evaluating communication outcomes.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCY For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus. fadavis.com 1. Recall a difficult communication you had recently with a patient. Think about the setting, the circumstances surrounding the conflict, and the reactions (verbal and nonverbal) of those involved. Now make a two-column table. In the first column, record your verbal and nonverbal messages. What got you upset? With which communication style did you react? What did you want for yourself? What did you want from the other person? 2. Use the Patient-Safe Communication Process to analyze the difficult communication situation described in Exercise 1. What could you have done to respond using patient-safe strategies?
References
1. Peplau, H. Interpersonal Relations in Nursing: A Conceptual Frame of Reference for Psychodynamic Nursing. N.Y., Macmillan/McGraw-Hill: 1988. 2. Spitzberg, B.H., Cupach, W.R.: Interpersonal Communication Competence. Beverly Hills, Calif., Sage: 1984. 3. Poole, M.S., Walther, J.B. National Communication Association. CommunicationUbiquitous, Complex, and Consequential. Washington, D.C., 2001. Located at http://www.natcom.org/research/monograph.pdf 4. Alzheimers Association. Communication: Best Ways to Interact With the Person With Dementia. Located at www.alz.org Accessed April 3, 2009. 5. Selye, H. The Stress of Life. N.Y., McGraw-Hill: 1976. 6. Maslow, A. Motivation and Personality. N.Y., Harper & Row: 1970. 7. Williams, A.M., Irurita, V.F. Emotional Comfort: The Patients Perspective of a Therapeutic Context. International Journal of Nursing Studies 43:405, 2006. 8. Satir, V. Conjoint Family Therapy. Palo Alto, Calif., Science and Behavior Books: 1964. 9. Satir, V. The New Peoplemaking. Mountain View, Calif., Science and Behavior Books: 1988. 10. Clark, C.C.: Holistic Assertiveness Skills for Nurses: Empower Yourself and Others. N.Y., Springer: 2003. 11. Adler, R.B., Rosenfeld, L.B., Proctor, R.F., et al. Interplay: The Process of Interpersonal Communication. Don Mills, Ontario, Canada, Oxford University Press: 2006. 12. Redhill, D. Ten Tips for Managing Your Corporate Identity. Workforce 78: 2, 1999. 13. Goffman, E. The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday: 1959. 14. Vander Zanden, J.W. Social Psychology, 3rd ed., N.Y.: Random House: 1984, pp. 235-237. 15. LaSala, K.B., Nelson, J. What Contributes to Professionalism? MEDSURG Nursing 14, 2005. 16. Smith, M.H. Body Adornment: Know the Limits. Nursing Management 34:22-24, 2003. 17. Stuppy, D., Armstrong, M., Casals-Ariet, C. Attitudes of Health Care Providers and Students Towards Tattooed People. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 27:1165-1170, 1998. 18. Townsel, L.J. Working Women: Dressing for Success. Ebony, 51:60-65, 1996.
CHAPTER
Key Words
Communication climate Conrming messages Disconrming messages Save face I statements Progressive relaxation Visual imagery
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ommunication climate is dened as the tone, emotions, and attitudes of individuals in relationships.1 The communication climate is directly affected by the risk factors of the transformational model because risk factors have a negative impact on climate: the more risk factors, the more potential for a negative climate. Communication risk factors can distort clear communication by interfering with the exactness of the message, which results in misinterpretations, which lead to negative tones, emotions, and attitudes within the nurse-patient relationship. The negative tones, emotions, and attitudes create obstacles to negotiating common meaning between the nurse and patient and increase the likelihood that communicators will not achieve intended communication outcomes. Risk factors fall into two categoriesemotional and physiologicaland the factors from both categories interact with each other. Emotional risk factors: Fear of the unknown, anxiety, grief and loss, dependency, sadness, pain, resentment, anger, insecurity, disbelief, and denial. Physiological risk factors: Physical disabilities, sensory impairment, sedation, memory loss, and fatigue. This chapter examines these emotional and physiological contents of the risk factor ring of the Transformational Model of Communication shown in Chapter 2 and the impact of these risk factors on the communication climate within the nurse-patient relationship. To conclude this chapter, we will introduce what can be done to transform negative communication climates.
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gown? asks the patient. Your response, I really need to give you your medications. Be very direct, and let the patient know you will be back or that you will send someone to help. Impersonal responses: These responses are intellectualized or over-generalized statements that convey ambiguity in the communication situation and can disconrm the value of another. For example, the patient tells the nurse he is having difculty coping with the behaviors of his teenage son. The nurse responds, Yes, it is a huge issue in todays world, isnt it? Every day, there is something in the news about problems with bringing up teenagers. Respond with encouraging statements. Use paraphrasing and empathy to facilitate nurse-patient communications and promote positive climates. Ambiguous responses: An ambiguous response contains more than one meaning and leaves communications unclear. People receiving these responses feel uncertain as to how they should assign meaning and can feel less valued. For example, a patient asks if you can do his dressing change before his family comes to visit, and you reply, Ill see. That might work. Respond to patients with clear messages, and do not put them in a position to feel uncertain about the intended meaning of your message. In addition, Adler2 describes the following disconrming response: You Are Wrong, and I am Right: For example, Mrs. Jones, you are completely wrong here in thinking your mother can return home. You have not considered any of her needs. You need to check into nursing home placement. There are times when we disagree, but a blunt response is not appropriate. It is possible to turn a you are wrong, and I am right message into a constructive one through learning to be tactful and saving face. Stated positively, the message would begin with an acknowledgement of the other, not a judgment against or attack on the individual, and deliver a sound argument in support of an opposing view. Mrs. Jones, I see where you are going with this, and I like the idea of planning now for your mothers discharge; however, there are many things to consider in ensuring she is safe at home. We should examine all the requirements and take a look at our options for when she leaves the hospital. The key to maintaining positive climates is to conrm the worth of others. This includes addressing issues of disagreement objectively and ensuring that messages do not attack the individual personally. Before we can begin to learn how to transform a negative climate, we need to have a thorough understanding of the nature of illness and how it threatens self-esteem, which inuences the communication climate within nurse-patient relationships.
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consider the 36-year-old woman who works as an elementary school teacher, has a husband and two young children, and has undergone a mastectomy. Her self-esteem is affectedprofoundlyby the change in her body image resulting from the mastectomy. Her sense of value will be affected by her perceptions of her changed ability to perform her roles of teacher, wife, and mother. You go into the room, and she and her husband are crying, and you immediately recognize the negative communication climate. As a nurse, the self-esteem and value you place on yourself may be affected by the tone, emotions, and attitudes in a negative climate. Tone, emotions, and attitudes are contagious. In general, you will feel anxious whenever you believe you should be able to respond appropriately in a nursing situation to create a positive communication climate, but you nd that you cannot. The way to reduce anxiety and build self-esteem in yourself in the face of negative communication climates is to develop knowledge and competence in managing emotional responses in patients, their families, and yourself.
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Transition to illness: The transition to illness is the time between the appearance of an illness (the onset) and the patients admission to himself that he is indeed ill. The selfimage of a healthy and vital person is being disrupted by symptoms. Denial and rationalization characterize this period; both are defenses against the threat to self-esteem. Both defenses come into play to avoid the emotions associated with becoming ill. Acceptance: Acceptance begins at the point when the person has decided something is denitely wrong and needs to do something about it. Convalescence: Convalescence begins once the patient is stabilized and starts to recover. Physically, the patient is getting better. Sadness and anger are prevalent in this stage. The patient may become frustrated and upset, especially if the illness is extended or severe. The limitations on functioning are the primary problem. If the patient is dying, the family and patient will grieve and mourn the loss. Grief and mourning also occur when recovery from illness is incomplete; the patient experiences signicant loss as a result of the health alteration. Grief associated with death and signicant loss initially produces shock, disbelief, and denial. As the loss begins to sink in, many people feel anger because they have no control over the situation. As a result, they may direct that anger at you or other health-care personnel. Next, they may express guilt and fear that they are being punished. Depression and sadness occur when the patient and family recognize that their lives will never again be the same. Finally, the patient and family come to terms with the loss and begin making plans for the future.8,9a The Patients Personal and Unique Response Not everyone goes through each physical and psychosocial stage. Also, while in a stage, not everyone progresses at the same rate, and not everyone responds in the same way. Peoples responses depend on their previous experience with illness and the health-care system as well as on their biological, psychological, social, gender, and cultural differences as described in Unit 1. In general, the more severe the illness, the more extensive the emotional, behavioral, and physical response. Two patients who have the same diagnosis may respond quite differently. Dependency: The Sick Role: Resentment, Anger Once a person has been diagnosed as sick with a specic set of symptoms, society excuses the person from role responsibilities. Traditional North American cultural sick role beliefs assume that the sick person and family will seek out and collaborate fully with health-care professionals, who are supposed to know more than the patient and family about the health problem and how to correct it. It is assumed that the sick person wants to get well and will do everything as instructed by health-care providers to get better as quickly as possible.9b For some people, the worst part of being sick is that they have to depend on others to take care of them. They cannot tolerate the thought that they are no longer independent and productive and, at least temporarily, that they have to give up social, professional, and community roles that are important to their self-esteem. On the other end of the dependency continuum is the person who refuses to perform self-care activities even after physically recovering to the point of being able to perform them. This patient does not seem to want to give up the sick role; in fact, the patient may enjoy the attention being received from health-care professionals, family, and friends.
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This attitude reflects low self-esteem. In addition, some patients may also feel insecure and incapable of doing things on their own, even though they have recovered physically.
Encourage patients to express their emotions. Patients or family members may talk angrily or cry when they are discouraged, frustrated, or upset. Alternatively, they may be sarcastic and make jokes about their problems. After ventilation, they may be able to talk about their frustrations with their current situation.10 The nurse may be able to assist directly with the problems or may need to direct patients and families to appropriate resources. The results of emotional expression include the healing of sadness, the relief of fear, and the release of anger. Everyone has built-in protective mechanisms that block painful emotions. These mechanisms are defenses that are activated automatically and unconsciously by the mind.11 They are gradually lowered as the patient and family release emotions and adapt to their situation.12 Communication Safety Alert
To be effective as a nurse, you must understand and accept the emotions of patients and families, no matter what, to create an atmosphere of safety and trust. Understanding and acceptance do not mean that you have to agree with the patient. Patients do the best they can, given their circumstances at the time.
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you have sensitivity to the situation by communicating carefully with verbal and nonverbal behaviors to demonstrate that sensitivity. The result of empathy is that the person feels really understood. You have created common meaning and established a postive communication climate.10,13,14 Empathy also means that you remain emotionally separate from the other person, even though you can understand the patients viewpoint. This is different from sympathy. Sympathy implies taking on the others needs and problems as if they were your own and becoming emotionally involved to the point of losing your objectivity.15 Communication Safety Alert
To empathize rather than sympathize, you must show feelings but not get caught up in feelings or overly identify with the patients and familys concerns. You will lose your objectivity if you share feelings so closely with a patient or family that your ability to think clearly and analyze problems becomes blocked.
Using the Patient-Safe Strategy of Empathy The objective of using the patient-safe strategy of empathy is to convey interest in and understanding of the concerns behind painful emotions. You must listen long enough to allow the other person to experience release. You function as a sounding board and personal condant. First, through empathy, you convey that the patient is not alone and that you will be there to help the patient through the situation. You will then act as a patient advocate to help the patient and family in doing whatever it takes to make sure their health-care needs are met.14,16 Second, you should make it clear that there may be some things that the patient has not thought about that can be used to help handle the problem in a meaningful way. At this point, you become an educational resource, helping the patient and family to think critically and analyze the situation. If a patient or family member can identify some areas that can be controlled, self-esteem will most likely increase, and the underlying emotional distress will probably decrease.
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Nursing students must learn to control their nervousness in patient care situations. Remember, emotions are transmitted back and forth between people and lead to positive or negative communication climates. You will be transmitting your anxieties to the patient, which will make the patient nervous. Communication Safety Alert
If you are very nervous, there is no way that you can focus on the patients emotions, because all you can concentrate on is the procedure and your own feelings about it. As you become calm and condent in doing technical procedures, you will be better able to focus on the patients emotional state and manage the communication climate.
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this thought could be hurt, guilt, shame, or worry. The name calling from someone intoxicated would lead you to believe and assign meaning based on your interpretations that the individual is cognitively impaired. The feeling associated with this thought may be pity or amusement. In both situations, the same event occurred: you were called names. But your feelings arising from your interpretations and assigned meaning differed. The point to be made is that you create your own emotional responses; no one does this for you. Owning Your Emotions: Use of I Statements The communication strategy for owning your emotions is to use I language. An I statement begins with the word I. The strategy was developed in the 1970s by Thomas Gordon.22 Taking responsibility for your emotions says a great deal about you and influences the trust established within interpersonal and professional relationships. I language demonstrates assertiveness without putting the other communicator on the defensive. The use of I statements shows a willingness to accept responsibility for owning your thoughts and feelings. I statements typically involve three components22: your feelings, the behavior, and the consequences the behavior has on you. Handling Emotions and Responding to a Personal Attack We have a tendency to become emotionally distraught and respond defensively when people convey messages that personally attack us. Defensiveness is a means to protect ourselves from any challenge that threatens our sense of self-esteem and our ability to save face. There are two essential strategies to be used when under personal attack.2 The rst strategy is to seek more information from the individual who is attacking you. You need to determine what the person is really saying or really feeling. For example, if you are accused with, You are so rude, ask an open-ended clarifying question, What do I do that is rude? Focus on pulling the communication to a clarication of behavior and away from a personal attack. Often, the communicator will adopt a different tone by the mere fact that you are actively listening. Depending on the personal attack statement, you may be able to determine specics by paraphrasing and using open-ended questions. The person says to you, We are always late because of you. Have you no respect for being on time? You reply, It sounds like you are upset that I took so long to get ready. Am I right? Again, try to remove the personal attack and uncover the underlying issue that is causing the problem. The second strategy is to determine if there are some aspects of the criticism with which you can agree.2 Often, we can nd some truth in criticism. For example, You are right; I do take a long time to return messages. Criticisms that describe a specic behavior and provide an offensive evaluation of the behavior can be challenging to respond to non-defensively. It is the offensive evaluation component that we have a hard time dealing with.2 The following is an example of a criticism with accompanying offensive evaluation: There is much to organize and plan when you are trying to build a deck. You are ridiculous to think you could do it in one weekend. The truth is there is much to organize when building a deck. The offensive evaluation is that you are ridiculous. To respond non-defensively, agree with the truth in the criticism only if it is correct, and do not accept the evaluation. Your response could be, You are right. There is a lot to organize and plan for building a deck. But I dont think that Im ridiculous. The focus should be on responding to the criticism of the behavior, instead of reacting to the offensive evaluation that is a personal attack.
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CHAPTER SUMMARY This chapter focused on the nature of communication climates created by individuals in relationships and how negative and positive communications develop in health-care settings. Specically, nurses must be aware of the tone, emotions, and attitudes of all communicators, including themselves. The nurse must identify a patients emotional response to the illness and use basic patient-safe communication strategies to help the patient express emotions and enhance the communication climate. The nurse must create an atmosphere in which the patient feels valued and an important part of the health-care team. The chapter also described the need for you to develop an awareness of your own emotional responses in clinical situations and how they affect the communication climate. You must learn to manage your personal emotional responses to promote postive communication climates.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCY For additional exercises, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. In an exercise called visual imagery, picture yourself in the most beautiful, relaxing location you can envision,23 sitting on a beach in the warm sun, for example. Close your eyes and hear the waves splashing against the shore. Feel the warm sun on your skin. Feel the warm ocean breeze on your face. See the gulls gliding gracefully across the glistening water. Say to yourself, I am relaxed, I am relaxed, I am relaxed. Just make sure the visual image has meaning to you. This is another good technique that can be used to help patients relax. 2. Practice using the basic patient-safe communication strategies described in this chapter to demonstrate empathy toward a classmate. Use active listening and empathy to encourage a classmate to express his or her ideas and feelings about an important life event. One student should tell the story of the important life event, and the other one should use empathic patient-safe communication strategies to listen fully and facilitate the expression of ideas and emotions. After the storyteller finishes, the listener should summarize his or her perception of the content and feelings expressed to validate the storytellers message. The storyteller will then state whether the summary is accurate.
References
1. Allen, W., Shea, J. Know Yourself and the Communication Climate. Located at http://www.allenshea.com/knowyourself.html Accessed November, 2008. 2. Adler, R.B., Rosenfeld, L.B., Proctor R.F., et al. Interplay: The Process of Interpersonal Communication. Don Mills, Ontario, Canada, Oxford University Press: 2006. 3. Burggraf, C.S., Sillars, A.L. A Critical Examination of Sex Differences in Marital Communication. Communication Monographs 54:276-294, 1987.
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4. Cissna, K.N., Sieberg, E. Patterns of Interactional Conrmation and Disconrmation. In Stewart, J. (ed.), Bridges, Not Walls, 7th ed. N.Y., McGraw-Hill: 1999, pp 336-346. 5. Beebe, S.A., Beebe, S.J., Redmond, M.V., et al. Interpersonal Communication: Relating to Others, 4th ed. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Pearson Education Canada, 2007. 6. Festinger, L.A. A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance. Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press: 1957. 7. Martin, H., Prange, A. The Stages of Illness: Psychosocial Approach. Nursing Outlook 10:168, 1962. 8. Kbler-Ross, E: On Death and Dying. N.Y., Macmillan: 1969. 9a. Kbler-Ross, E., Kessler, D. On Grief and Grieving: Finding the Meaning of Grief Through the Five Stages. Riverside, N.J., Simon and Schuster: 2005. 9b. Parsons, T. The Social System. N.Y., Free Press: 1951. 10. Rogers, C.R. Client-Centered Therapy. N.Y., Houghton Mifin: 1951. 11. Freud, S. Complete Psychological Works: London, Hogarth Press: 1964. 12. Zook, R. Learning to Use Positive Defense Mechanisms. American Journal of Nursing 98:16B, 1998. 13. Sutherland, J.A. Historical Concept Analysis of Empathy. Issues in Mental Health Nursing 16:555, 1995. 14. Hoiat, M. Empathy in Patient Care: Antecedents, Development, Measurement, and Outcomes. N.Y., Springer: 2007. 15. Sundeen, S.J. Nurse-Client Interaction: Implementing the Nursing Process, 5th ed. St. Louis, Mosby: 1994. 16. Berman, A.J., Snyder, S.J., Kozier, B.J., et al. Kozier & Erbs Fundamentals of Nursing: Concepts, Process and Practice, 8th ed. Upper Saddle River, N.J., Prentice Hall: 2008. 17. Mayne, T.J.: Negative Affect and Health: The Importance of Being Earnest. Cognition and Emotion 13:601-635, 1999. 18. Kennedy-Moore, E., Watson, J.C. Expressing Emotion: Myths, Realities, and Therapeutic Strategies. N.Y., Guilford Press: 1999. 19. Peper, M. Awareness of Emotions: A Neuropsychological Perspective. In Ellis, R.D., Newton, N. (eds.), The Caldron of Consciousness: Motivation, affect and Self-OrganizationAn Anthology. Philadelphia, John Benjamins: 2000, pp 243-269. 20. American Psychological Association. Controlling Anger Before It Controls You. Located at www.apa.org/topics/controlanger.html Accessed October, 2009. 21. Ellis, A. Overcoming Destructive Beliefs, Feeling, and Behaving: New Directions for Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy. Amherst, N.Y., Prometheus Books: 2001. 22. Gordon, T. TET: Teacher Effectiveness Training. N.Y., Wyden: 1974. 23. Samuels, M., Samuels, N. Seeing With the Minds Eye. N.Y., Random House: 1975.
CHAPTER
Key Words
Caring touch Task touch Protective touch
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Learning Outcomes he primary purpose of this chapter is to help you develop an understanding of touch and its effective use in nursing practice as a patient-safe communication strategy. Examine the transformational model in Chapter 2, and locate touch in the patient-safe communication strategies ring. Touch is used as an instrument of patient safety because it can help to overcome and reduce many risk factors that block creation of common meaning and positive transformational outcomes. Appropriate use of touch requires high-level communication competency and is a critical and indispensible patient-safe communication strategy when administering nursing care.1,2 For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.com.3 In doing the self-assessment, you can determine your current motivation to touch based on your past experiences. Do not worry if you score below average; this chapter will help you understand how to practice touch in an appropriate manner and how to use touch as a patient-safe communication strategy.
TOUCH IN GENERAL
Nursing has always been a very high-touch profession. Nurses provide hands-on care when patients are not able to care for themselves. These activities include: bathing, feeding, moving from bed to chair, assisting with walking, and other personal care for patients in addition to physical assessments and treatments. Nurses must learn how and when to touch as well as when not to touch. Touch is the most basic form of human nonverbal communication. Through touch, humans communicate such emotions as love, anger, and fear. In childhood, we see the raw forms of emotional expression through touch such as hitting, biting, pinching, hugging, and kissing. As adults, we learn through socialization to control the way we touch to express our emotions. As with any communication strategy, some of us are better at using and interpreting touches than others. The way you have learned to touch other humans is, in part, the result of your life experiences and cultural inuences.4 Research has shown, for instance, that children of high-touch families are touchers as adults.5,6 People of Italian, Jewish, Spanish, and South American ethnic backgrounds report touching more frequently than those of German and British ancestry. To research public displays of touch between different cultures, Sidney Jourard counted the number of touches per hour among couples sitting in cafes in various countries. He found 180 touches per hour in Puerto Rico, 110 touches per hour in Paris, 2 touches per hour in Gainesville, Florida, and 0 touches per hour in London.7 These ndings illustrate the inuence of culture on touch. In general, North Americans are very careful about whom they touch. Reasons for this reticence include the fear that a touch may be misinterpreted as having sexual overtones or be perceived as controlling.8 People worry about accusations of sexual harassment and abuse in schools and workplaces. A slogan of the National Education Association, whose membership includes millions of teachers, sums up the perspective in North America today: Teach, dont touch. While the slogan is certainly too broad in scope to become the rule for teachers, it is understandable why the organization believes it has to protect its members by emphasizing not touching. Alternately, research has indicated that waitresses who touched customers on the shoulder or hand as they returned change received bigger tips than those who did not.9
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Most beginning nursing students are anxious about touching patients.14 They are awkward and embarrassed about viewing and touching typically unexposed private parts of human anatomy and touching patients in intimate areas. For example, in fundamentals courses, students typically are hesitant and anxious about performing basic procedures, such as a bed bath. When learning health assessment, a male student may wonder in embarrassment what he is supposed to do with a womans breast while he tries to find her apical pulse. Some students feel awkward even when performing touch in seemingly innocuous situations, such as picking up a patients arm to put on a blood pressure cuff. Many students lack knowledge and self-condence in how to touch patients who are emotionally distressed, in pain, anxious, or agitated. Keep in mind that touch is like any other nursing skill. Anxiety and awkwardness are typical, natural reactions whenever learning and performing something new. As you gain practice in touching patients, you will become much more comfortable doing so and you also will develop your own professional patient-safe touching style.
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exercise her lungs, or to ignore the crying to avoid spoiling the baby? At present, child authorities generally advise picking up a baby when it cries to meet the babys security needs and ultimately affect the development of a babys self-concept. In other words, the baby learns to trust others and that he or she is important, resulting in a positive self-concept.8 Touch provides infants with security necessary for normal psychological development.16,17 Touch has been found to be benecial for humans in many ways. Studies of massage in premature infants have shown that a 15-minute massage three times daily led to hospital discharge 6 days early, at a savings of $10,000 per infant.18,19 Other studies have shown that handling increases visual alertness in babies and also has soothing effects.17,20 Touch also supplies the security needed for exploration as a toddler. Children explore their environment and repeatedly run back to their mothers for reassurance. After consolation, they feel secure to return to their exploration. Does it follow that, as people grow into adults, they still need touch? Hollender conducted interviews of men and women to determine the adult desire to hold or be held.21,22 Most people indicated a moderate desire to be held, with men nearly as high as women in their ratings of the desire to hold or to be held. He found that many adults reported an increased need for touch when they were depressed or anxious. Touch has been described as the ultimate intimacy in humans.23 Although the need for touch does not go away in adulthood, the need may be neglected or ignored, resulting in lonliness and depression.
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also allow and expect nurses to provide comforting touches. Touching is part of the nurses job description. Beginning nursing student typically wonder if patients will allow them to perform procedures or give comforting touches. Research on touch and male nursing students has shown men to be especially concerned that their comfort touches may be misinterpreted as flirtatious or sexual.26 Male and female students need reassurance that touch in the nurse-patient relationship is expected and welcome. Most people like to be touched. Most patients willingly accept and welcome touches from nurses and nursing students.
Intent of Touch
The primary factor that determines how a patient will respond to touch is the intention of the touch. Jones suggests that touch needs to be related to the context of the situation.8 The meaning of the touch relates to the situation, the timing, and the manner in which the touch is delivered. Communication Safety Alert
You will need to evaluate each situation carefully and then deliver appropriate touches. Thus, a hand on a patients shoulder can convey, I want to comfort you, I like you, or I was just kidding.
You need to become familiar with the three basic intents of touch that have been identied in nursing: caring touch, task touch, and protective touch. You also need to know when it is appropriate to use and not to use touch.10-12 Caring Touch Caring touch has an emotional intent and involves comforting touch and encouraging touch. Comforting touch includes holding a patients hand, stroking the forehead, squeezing the shoulder, stroking the arm, and placing a hand on the chest. These types of touch are usually associated with dying, discomfort, or grief. Specically, patients who are in pain, anxious, frightened, confused, or agitated often respond very positively to touch. They will openly express their appreciation and reciprocate the touch. For example, consider the family member who reported that his wifes favorite nurse spent a few minutes each day holding her hand and stroking her forehead when she was very ill during chemotherapy for breast cancer. He described her as the best nurse because of how much she cared about his wife as a person. Encouraging touches include placing an arm around the shoulders, giving a hug or a pat on the back, and playful hitting and poking. Encouraging touch is more hopeful and future-oriented and is often used to celebrate clinical progress. These touches are used for supporting, reassuring, and raising the spirits of patients and families. For example, several hours after nursing a patient through a difcult labor, a labor and delivery nurse visits a patient and asks how she is doing and immediately gives her a hug. The hug conveys congratulations and also emotional support at that special time. Research indicates that hand holding before anesthesia usually makes the procedure less frightening.27 Also during surgery, a nurse may stand at the foot of the bed and lay a hand on the foot or ankle of the patient or may stand at the head of the bed and lay a hand on the patients face to reduce the patients anxiety.27
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Task Touch Most touch in nursing is task touch, which involves physical assessment and procedural treatments that must be done. Gender differences in touch have been the focus of studies. Characteristically, men are less gentle when touching others than women are.28,29 The objective is to be as gentle, soft, and careful with task touches as you can be. Task touch should overlap with caring touch. Through gentle, soft, and careful touch during assessments and procedures, you will communicate warmly that you value and respect patients and that you really do care about them. In contrast, hurried, rough, jarring touches communicate coldness and that you do not value and respect the patient. Protective Touch Physically protective touches for patients involve exerting control over the patient in a situation in which patient safety is a primary concern. It is best to combine protective touch with caring touch whenever possible. For example, patients sometimes need to be held down to keep them from harming themselves. Confused patients may be restrained and sedated to ensure that they will not pull on vital tubes or fall out of a bed or chair. It is often helpful to use caring touch with a patient who is being restrained. The patients hand can be gently held down as someone else carefully applies the restraint. Take care, though, to minimize the danger of being hurt by a combative patient who may attempt to strike or harm you. Say, for example, that an elderly woman who had gallbladder surgery has a reaction to the anesthetic. She becomes disoriented, does not know where she is, and attempts to pull out her intravenous line and get out of bed. She is very strong, and it takes two male attendants to hold her down while you gently apply restraints. The next morning, when the anesthetic has worn off and she is fully alert, you can safely remove the restraints.
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unfortunate that these patients receive less touch because they are the ones most in need of caring touch and other forms of emotional support.
Shaking Hands
Handshaking has become a means of communicating how people feel about each other. We have all experienced the variations of handshakes, including differences in pressure, duration, and awkwardness. Chances are that you already understand the rules of the customary handshake in Western civilizations. A hearty, rm grip is supposed to indicate that you are sincere and pleased to meet someone. Men usually have a stronger handshake grip than women.28,29 Look the person directly in the eyes and smile during the handshake. Verbal expressions that are used with the handshake include, Glad to meet you and How are you today? Some people respond by grasping the elbow or forearm of the other persons arm. A few grasp the extended hand with both hands and shake. Both variations indicate extra affection and friendliness.9 In general, handshakes are required as you meet someone for the rst time, whether you introduce yourself or are introduced by someone else. In the past, men alone shook hands, not women. Today women are expected to shake hands when they are introduced to each other or to men. As you introduce yourself to your patient and family for the rst time, you may greet them with a handshake. Suppose you have just met your patient for the day, shaken hands, and noted that the patient held on to your hand for a few seconds longer than you would have otherwise expected. She smiled at you as you shook her hand. Both the lingering hand and the smile lets you know she responded to your touch positively. Next, you plan to do a brief physical assessment to be sure she is progressing physically as expected, and then you want to discuss plans for how to proceed with the tasks that need to be done that day. You begin by pulling back the sheets and lifting her gown. The patient frowns, clings to her covers, and says, What are you going to do to me? What went wrong?
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the meaning of proximity or closeness of one person to another as the distance between the two people increases or decreases.33 The Intimate Zone The intimate zone of personal space is from the skin surface to about 16 inches away from the body. This is the zone violated when the covers were drawn back without warning. People guard this zone the most. This zone is reserved for close friends and relatives, for those with whom there is emotional closeness. Nurses and other health-care providers must ask permission to enter this zone. Tell a person what you are going to do before you attempt to do it. Explain sensations that the patient can expect to feel as you touch so that the patient will not think anything out of the ordinary is being experienced. Explaining the steps and sensations in a procedure as you go along guides the patient and decreases anxiety. Communication Safety Alert
Warm your hands and your stethoscope before touching the patient. Few things make someone tense and withdraw faster than cold hands. Use slow, deliberate, gentle, and purposeful touches as you do your assessment or any procedure, watching the patients nonverbal responses. Always ask permission, and let the patient know what you will be doing before you touch, even for the simplest procedure, such as a blood pressure.
The Personal Zone A bit further out, from 1.5 to 4 feet, is the personal zone. This is generally the zone that is used most often, especially for socializing. People typically stand this far apart at parties and friendly gatherings. In nursing, this is the zone in which to conduct a personal history and to discuss plans for how to proceed with the activities that must be done on any given day. Sit at the same height as the patient, and discuss the plan and options quietly. If the patient sits and you stand, you create a position of dominance and give the impression of not having much time to sit and discuss the plan of care. If you want to nd out if the patient is having any problems or feeling any discomfort, you need to move to within 4 feet and get on the same level as the patient. Communication Safety Alert
Beginning students need to get accustomed to being in the personal zone with a person who would otherwise be a stranger. Typically, you would not stand so close to a stranger. There is a set of expectations about how you should act in the role of nurse. One of these expectations is that you are within personal distance most of the time, especially if you want to develop effective nurse-patient relationships and encourage patients to respond to you as you would like them to.
The Social Zone From 4 to 12 feet away from a person is the social zone. This is an impersonal zone, and it is the space used for strangers and for people we do not know. This zone is often misused in nursing. Most of what is done in nursing requires the use of the personal zone because what is discussed is private.
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The Public Zone Distances that exceed 12 feet from a person are in the public zone. A person giving a speech would stand at least 12 feet from the audience. You might use the public zone during patient educational activities that involve giving a lecture to a group of patients and their families. Cultural Dictates The preceding generalizations about personal space are based on research involving European North Americans. The distances in the four zones are averages that have been computed based on observations of North Americans. Keep in mind that different cultures draw different lines around personal space. So, depending on your ethnic background, you or your patient may need more or less personal space. For example, descendants of Hispanics, Middle Easterners, and southern Europeans (Italians, French, Spanish, and so on) stand much closer to each other and feel comfortable. Descendants from Asia and Northern Europe (Germany, England, Ireland, and so on) may not feel as comfortable in proximity because they are used to having more space. As you keep these zones and the behaviors expected within them in mind, temper that knowledge with the fact that you must allow the patient and family to select the distance that is comfortable to them when they are talking to you.
Painful Touches
One rule that transcends all cultures is never inict pain on another through touch, even accidentally.8 Some nursing procedures are uncomfortable, and some hurt. Many students feel bad about purposefully performing such procedures as dressing changes, suture removal, injections, and catheterizations. You must learn the correct way to perform each procedure so that it produces the least amount of pain, and you must use pain medication appropriately before such procedures. Communication Safety Alert
During painful procedures, talk gently, and coach the patient. Avoid giving patients the impression that they are objects to be worked on. If a procedure requires your full attention, a second person should be available strictly for emotional support and coaching the patient throughout the procedure. Apologize during and after the procedure, I know this hurts, but I will be done in a minute. Thank you for holding still. Afterward, Im sorry I hurt you. You were very patient and cooperative.
Hugging
Nurses can learn to give compassionate and supportive hugs that are thoughtful and respectful. Hugs can be therapeutic when the intention is to show that you care and want to
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comfort a patient or family member of the patient.34 Hugging a child before the induction of anesthesia may make it less frightening, for example. As you read this, you might be thinking, What about the sexual overtones of a hug? Hugs that nurses dispense are compassionate, not passionate. Patients recognize the difference. Communication Safety Alert
Be certain that you have permission before hugging. A hug is within the intimate zone and, therefore, requires permission. Sometimes the permission may be nonverbal, and you respond spontaneously. Or you could ask, Can I give you a hug?
There are many types of hugs for different purposes. You will develop your own hugging style and a sense for when a hug is needed and acceptable. Keating, in her book on hug therapy, described 10 types of hugs.35 Three hugs that are especially useful in nursing situations are the A-frame hug, the side-to-side hug, and the bear hug, A-Frame Hug This involves wrapping two arms around the shoulders of the patient and leaning in toward the patient until your shoulders and cheeks touch. This hug is brief, and nothing below the shoulders makes contact. Patients may also wrap their arms around your shoulders. If you have not had much experience hugging, this is a comfortable and nonthreatening hug to try rst. This hug is classic and formal, and it can be used with new acquaintances or professional colleagues. It is often used in some cultures as a hello or goodbye hug and may be combined with a kiss on the cheek. Side-to-Side Hug This is a one-armed squeeze around the shoulder or the waist of another. It is a more playful hug. Suppose you are walking with a patient, supporting her around the shoulders or waist. As you help her back into bed, you might give her a squeeze and tell her what a good job she did walking and that she is making good progress. If the patient is crying or frightened, you may gently put an arm around her shoulders or waist to offer emotional support. Bear Hug This involves bodies touching in a powerful, strong squeeze that can last for 5 to 10 seconds and generate a warm, supportive, secure feeling. Take care to make the hug rm and not breathless, remembering always to be considerate of your partner. Parents share these hugs with children, giving a You are terric message. Friends might give these hugs as a way to share joy or sorrow. Communication Safety Alert
A patient with a history of abuse, either physical or sexual, may prefer little or no touch beyond what is needed to carry out tasks. Psychiatric patients may require special care with touch. Some patients will keep their distance and pull away to avoid a touch. Nurses must become very sensitive to patients who withdraw from touch. If a patient withdraws as you touch, and you realize that you made a touch mistake, offer a brief apology such as, Im sorry, I did not mean to startle you. Your apology shows that you care and that you are aware of what happened.
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Many students are concerned that patients may misinterpret their touches, even during a procedure. For example, young female students just learning to do bed baths commonly express concern about male patients becoming sexually stimulated during cleaning of the genitals. Likewise, male students express the same concerns as they learn to bathe females.26 Avoid long, lingering touches anywhere, especially in private areas. In addition, remember that the majority of patients unable to perform their own perineal care are too sick to become aroused. As you clean, focus on the idea that perineal care is essential to prevent urinary tract infections.
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HIGH-LEVEL COMPETENCY COMMUNICATION EXERCISES For additional exercises, visit davisplus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Go up to someone you do not know in class, shake hands, and introduce yourself. Follow this up with a group discussion of the various ways that students in class shook hands and what this means based on past experiences. 2. Give the partner you just met a hug. Experiment exchanging the A-frame, side-to-side, and bear hugs with classmates. Follow the hugging with a group discussion of the type of hugs that were given in class and what this means based on your past experiences.
References
1. Gatlon, G. (ed.). Touch Papers: Dialogues on Touch in the Psychoanalytic Space. Karnac, London: 2006. 2. Chang, S.O. The Conceptual Structure of Physical Touch in Caring. Journal of Advanced Nursing 33:820-827, 2008. 3. Anderson, P.A., Leibowitz, K. The Development and Nature of the Construct Touch Avoidance. Environmental Psychology and Nonverbal Behavior 3:89, 1978. 4. Halley, J.O. Boundaries of Touch: Parenting and Adult-Child Intimacy. Urbana, Ill., University of Illinois Press, 2007. 5. Jones, S.E., Yarbrough, A.E. A Naturalistic Study of the Meanings of Touch. Communication Monograph 52:19, 1985. 6. Gladney, K., Barker, L. The Effects of Tactile History on Attitudes Toward and Frequency of Touching Behavior. Sign Language Studies 24:231, 1979. 7. Jourard, S.M. An Exploratory Study of Body Accessibility. British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology 5:221, 1966. 8. Jones, S.E. The Right Touch: Understanding and Using the Language of Physical Contact. Cresskill, N.J., Hampton Press: 1994. 9. Colt, G.H., Schatz, H., Hollister, A. The Magic of Touch. Life 8:5461, 1997. 10. Talton, C.W. Touchof All KindsIs Therapeutic. RN 2:61, 1995. 11. Estabrooks, C.A. Touch: A Nursing Strategy in the Intensive Care Unit. Heart and Lung 18:392, 1989. 12. Adomat, R., Killingworth, A. Care of the Critically Ill Patient: The Impact of Stress on the Use of Touch in Intensive Therapy Units. Journal of Advanced Nursing 19:912, 1994. 13. Barnhill B.J., Holbert, M.D., Jackson, N.M., et al. Using Pressure to Decrease the Pain of Intramuscular Injections. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 12:52, 1996. 14. Rombalski, J.J. A Personal Journey in Understanding Physical Touch as a Nursing Intervention. Journal of Holistic Nursing 21:73-80, 2003. 15. Caplan, M. To touch Is to Live: The Need for Genuine Affection in an Impersonal World. Prescott, Ariz., Hohm Press: 2002. 16. Reite, M.L. Touch, Attachment, and Health: Is There a Relationship? In Brown, C.C. (ed.). The Many Facets of Touch. Johnson & Johnson Baby Products Co., 1984, p. 58. 17. White, B.L., Castle, P.W. Visual Exploratory Behavior Following Postnatal Handling of Human Infants. Perceptual and Motor Skills 18:497, 1964. 18. Field, T. Tactile/Kinesthetic Stimulation Effects on Preterm Neonates. Pediatrics 77:654, 1986. 19. Field, T. Alleviating Stress in Newborn Infants in the Intensive Care Unit. Stimulation and the Preterm Infant 17:1, 1990. 20. Harrison, L. Effects of Gentle Human Touch on Preterm Infants: Pilot Study Results. Neonatal Network 15:35, 1996. 21. Hollender, M.H. The Need or Wish to Be Held. Archives of General Psychiatry 22:445, 1970. 22. Hollender, M.H. Wish to Be Held and Wish to Hold in Men and Women. Archives of General Psychiatry 33:49, 1976. 23. Grader, R. The Cuddle Sutra: An Unabashed Celebration of the Ultimate Intimacy. Naperville, Ill., Sourcebooks Casablanca: 2007.
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24. Nelson, D. From the Heart Through the Hands: The Power of Touch in Caregiving. Forres, Findhorn, England: 2001. 25. Wells-Federman, C.L. The Mind-Body Connection: The Psychophysiology of Many Traditional Nursing Interventions. Clinical Nurse Specialist 9:59, 1995. 26. Harding, T. Suspect Touch: A Problem for Men in Nursing. Nursing Journal 12: 28-34, 2008. 27. Tovar, M.K. Touch: The Benecial Effects for the Surgical Patient. Association of Perioperative Registered Nurses Journal 49:1356, 1989. 28. Glass, L. He Says, She Says: Closing the Communication Gap Between the Sexes. Berkeley, N.Y.: 1993. 29. Glass, L. I Know What Youre Thinking: Using the Four Codes of Reading People to Improve Your Life. Hoboken, John Wiley & Sons: 2003. 30. Freudenberger, H.J. Staff Burnout. Journal of Social Issues 30:159, 1974. 31. Edvardsson, J.D., Sandman, P., Rasmussen, B.H. Meanings of Giving Touch in the Care of Older Patients: Becoming a Valuable Person and Professional. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 12:601-609, 2003. 32. Newson, P. A Comforting Touch: Enhancing Residents Wellbeing. Nursing and Residential Care 10:269-273, 2008. 33. Hall, E.T. The Hidden Dimension. Garden City, N.Y., Anchor Books/Doubleday: 1966. 34. Post, E. Etiquette: The Blue Book of Social Usage. N.Y., Funk & Wagnall: 1940. 35. Keating, K. The Hug Therapy Book. Center City, Minn., Hazelden: 1995. 36. Field, T. Massage Therapy Research. Edinburgh, N.Y., Elsevier-Churchill Livingstone: 2006.
CHAPTER
Key Words
Therapeutic humor Nontherapeutic humor Arousal phase Relaxation phase
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umor and laughter are important patient-safe communication strategies that are linked to healing and a sense of well-being. They are also effective therapeutic mechanisms for releasing stress-related tensions. A sense of humor, including the ability to laugh with others and to laugh at oneself, has been associated with good health for centuries. For example, during the 18th century, there was a saying that the arrival of a single clown has a more healthful impact on the health of a village than that of 20 asses laden with medication.1 This same idea is reected in the modern version of the expression, Laughter is the best medicine.2 For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com. In doing the self-assessment, you can determine your current ability to laugh at life based on your past experiences. During the late 1970s, Norman Cousins stimulated a scientic interest in the health professions regarding the benets of humor and laughter during illness. His popular book, Anatomy of an Illness, described how 10 minutes of laughter rendered him free of pain for 2 hours. He said that humor aided his recovery from ankylosing spondylitis, an immune disorder that causes pain and inammation of bones and joints.3,4 Since then, nurses and other health-care researchers have been exploring the therapeutic effects of humor and are nding ways to integrate humor into patient care situations and with each other.5-14 Therapeutic humor in health-care situations can be used as a patient-safe communication strategy. Therapeutic humor has been dened as: Any intervention that promotes health and wellness by stimulating a playful discovery, expression or appreciation of the absurdity or incongruity of lifes situations. This intervention may enhance health or be used as a complementary treatment of illness to facilitate healing or coping, whether physical, emotional, cognitive, social or spiritual.15 Nursing education programs and health-care institutions expect nurses to take their jobs very seriously, and they do. Nevertheless, many nurses have realized how benecial humor can be when it is used appropriately. Humor is not appropriate in every situation. It is a patient-safe strategy that needs to be used after careful assessment of the situation and only with knowledge of the emotional state of the patient.14,16 Therapeutic humor as a patient-safe strategy in nursing involves the purposeful use of humor to establish relationships by accelerating the development of trust; relieving anxiety and fear; releasing and defusing anger, hostility, and aggression; and improving patient education.5-13,17-21 Humor is an important patient-safe communication strategy used to reduce risk factors that block creation of common meaning and positive transformational outcomes. Research suggests that patients expect and appreciate a sense of humor in their nurses and that a sense of humor is regarded as an important characteristic of a good nurse.5,9,11,13,14,16,21-25 Humor makes health-care providers more human to patients and reduces the distance between the nurse and the patient. Patient safety is enhanced because the nurse-patient relationship is established and maintained through the use of humor. Humor is located in the patient-safe communication strategies ring of the transformational model in Chapter 2. Appropriate use of humor requires high-level communication competency. The primary purpose of this chapter is to explore the effects of humor and appropriate and inappropriate uses of humor in nurse-patient relationships.
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Nontherapeutic Humor
Humor is not appropriate when it takes place at the expense of individuals or groups and alienates them. Jokes that tease maliciously and belittle someone or a group are termed put-downs. Jokes can be contemptuous or sarcastic and thus aggressive and hostile expressions of dislike and disdain. Ethnic humor or jokes about gender differences can be offensive and indicate prejudice. These jokes are intended as insults to express superiority over someone else.8,14,16 People who use this type of humor may have low self-esteem and feel insecure. In cases of low self-esteem, people build themselves up by putting others down. Instead of reducing tension, laughing at someone is insensitive and creates more stressful emotional tension.1,14 Nurses need to be very careful never to be insulting with humor; they need to laugh with, but not at, patients and their families. Humor is not appropriate when a patient is very sick or emotionally distraught. If someone is very fearful, very anxious, very sad, or in great pain, humor will not be appreciated. All of the persons energy is needed to ward off the danger, and the comic effect is lost. The dangerous threat must be controlled before reference to the problem can be enjoyed through humor.6,7,13,14,17-19 When a patient is in a crisis situation, humor results in disgust or horror. For example, consider the patient who was in the recovery room and breathing heavily. The nurse had just assessed his pulse, blood pressure, and ventilatory status and believed that his heavy breathing resulted from anxiety. She said, Hey buddy, how about controlling that heavy breathing? Ive got goose bumps! The patient was so
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upset he later stated, She was so uncaring. I couldnt breathe because it hurt so bad, and she was making jokes! What is hilarious to one person can be insulting and tasteless to another. This difference depends on biophysical, psychological, social, cultural, and spiritual states of being. You must rst know your audience to understand the effect of specic types of humor. The criteria for determining the appropriateness of humor are in the Communication Safety Alert. Communication Safety Alert
Criteria for Determining Appropriateness of Humor (Adapted from Pasquali, E.A. Learning to Laugh: Humor as Therapy. Journal of Psychosocial Nursing 28:31, 1990.) Anxiety level: Humor is appropriate when patient anxiety is in the mild-to-moderate range and when humor can decrease patient anxiety. Humor is inappropriate when patient anxiety is in the severe-to-panic range and when it increases patient anxiety. Coping style: Humor is appropriate when it helps a patient cope more effectively, facilitates learning, puts the situation in perspective, or decreases social distance and when patient cognitive and emotional status permit understanding of and response to humor. Humor is inappropriate when it leads to avoiding dealing with problematic situations, when it masks feelings or increases social distance, and when psychopathology interferes with understanding of or response to humor. Humor style: Humor is appropriate when it conforms with the type of humor and humorist that the patient enjoys and when it laughs with people (i.e., laughs at what people do, not at who they are). Humor is inappropriate when it ignores patient humor style and when it laughs at people (other-deprecating humor.)
Arousal Phase
During arousal, catecholamines (such as adrenaline) increase, which speeds up breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure. Depending on how intense the laughter, various groups of muscles contract. When people laugh so hard that they cry, the tears produced contain steroids and other toxins that accumulate under stress.2,31 Thus, through secretion of tears, the body regains a healthier biochemical balance. In addition, the immune system is stimulated into helping the body ght disease.16,32-36 A smile causes the zygomaticus major face muscle to contract, which stimulates the master thymus gland to secrete thymosin and produce T-cell lymphocytes.37 These lymphocytes are primary components of the immune defense system, which helps people stay healthy and ght disease. Laughter also increases an antibody in saliva that prevents upper respiratory infection and lowers blood sugar levels.38-40
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Laughter also reduces the perception of pain.3,16,23,39,41 The exact mechanism of this effect remains unknown, although it is theorized that laughter stimulates the brain to release endorphins.2,17-19 Endorphins are hormones that act as the bodys natural pain killers. In addition, endorphins give people happy feelings and sometimes even feelings of euphoria, feelings that are produced when they laugh.
Relaxation Phase
People feel terric after a good laugh. Following arousal and the release of hormones, the body responds automatically by relaxing muscular tensions.30 In addition, blood pressure and heart rate drop below the pre-laughter rate. Laughter promotes breathing patterns that use the diaphragm, the opposite of the thoracic breathing that occurs under stress. Diaphragmatic breathing patterns produce respiratory relaxation.1 The physical state of muscle relaxation cannot exist simultaneously with anxiety.20,42,43
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distance between yourself and the patient, and you will nd yourself less effective in helping the patient deal with the situation and will increase the potential for a harmful event to occur. This section also covers gender differences in using humor.
Emotional Situations
There are many emotional situations that patients are forced to encounter in health-care settings. Sometimes, patients try to face (or avoid) such situations using humor. Patients often express their fears and concerns about body image through jokes. For example, suppose you are taking vital signs on a patient who had cardiac surgery 3 days ago and has been progressing very well. She is a tiny, thin lady who is 78 years old and is covered with dark bruises around her chest and leg incisions, around the sites used to obtain blood samples from both arms, and around the area where the central line had been inserted. The patient is sitting up in bed and, with smiling bright blue eyes, she looks at you and jokingly says, Just look at me! It looks like someone beat me with a hammer. You smile at her and say, We sure do beat patients up around here, no doubt about it! Then seriously you say, Ill bet youre wondering if you are ever going to heal from all this. But you know, those black and blue marks are all normal, and they will all go away. Your incisions are also healing nicely, and your blood pressure and heart are doing fine. Why did the patient make the joking remark? She was asking indirectly, How am I doing? I look and feel a mess. Will I ever get better from all this? This remark points to body image disturbance and a need for reassurance.
Embarrassing Situations
Embarrassing situations are numerous in health-care settings, including many that involve intimate procedures. Patients commonly joke about bedpans, bathrooms, and enemas to release nervous tension. Sometimes self-ridicule is used by the patient. For example, How is a person with a big butt like mine supposed to t on that bedpan? Laughing with the patient would be appropriate. What if you had made that comment, How is someone with a big butt like yours supposed to use this bedpan? The patient almost certainly would have taken it as an insult. When a patient engages in self-ridicule, then you can laughgently with the patient. Patients may be embarrassed to talk about certain subjects and may initiate a topic through humor to determine whether it is acceptable to talk about. For example, suppose you are teaching a 55-year-old male patient with a colostomy how to irrigate and change the bag. In the middle of the irrigation, he laughs and says, There goes my sex life! I guess I can work on my golf game. You smile at him and ask seriously, Do you have some concerns about sex? He responds, My wife has such a weak stomach, she wont even look at this thing on me! You continue to let him express his feelings; then you say, Maybe we can sit down with your wife and discuss this problem together. If you have little experience or knowledge in this area, then you can make a referral to other nurses on your unit or to another health-care provider. Nurses are not expected to be marriage counselors unless they have special certification, so it may be appropriate to assess the situation from the wifes perspective and then make a referral.
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Unpleasant Situations
Unpleasant situations for patients are common in health-care settings. Patients often make jokes about their lack of control over what is being done to them and about the hospital routines. They pretend to be in a motel, and they joke about the food and the service they receive. You have seen many such jokes on the fronts of humorous get-well cards. These jokes are expressions of patients feelings of powerlessness and lack of control. Listen to the message that the patient is really delivering. Joke back, and then become serious about the topic. Some patients need to have blood drawn morning, noon, and night. They refer to the blood drawers as the vampires. As you go to assess your patient, he says jokingly, Those vampires keep coming to get me. Theyre sucking all my blood. You sense that he is angry and feels out of control, and you say, The vampires do come in here a lot, but we need to know the results of all those tests. Do you have some questions about the blood tests? The patient says, I just dont understand why they cant draw it once a day instead of so many times each day. Now you can explain the tests and what they indicate, and you can get him involved in what is being done. That should help decrease his feelings of anger and powerlessness.
Avoidance Tactic
Sometimes patients use humor to avoid facing problems. In this case, however, humor becomes maladaptive. Patients who constantly make jokes will not admit or express their true feelings. In this case, humor is used to escape from reality and to avoid confronting and dealing with fears. In other words, humor becomes a way of escaping from difculties rather than making it easier to deal with difculties by putting them in a new perspective. In this situation, you will probably need to confront the patient, help the patient take a serious look at the situation, and do some problem solving.
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Making Contact
As a nurse, you cannot be effective until you form a trusting relationship with the patient. Humor is one way of developing that relationship through sharing and expressing thoughts and feelings, including anxieties, fears, and anger. Demonstrating a sense of humor as you meet a patient can also serve to break the ice. When you share laughter with someone, you can quickly make supportive emotional contact.1,5,43 For example, consider the patient who comes in for a clinic visit, and you need to ask her to remove all her clothes and put on a imsy paper gown. She is walking and talking and does not appear to be anxious, fearful, or in pain. Most people feel embarrassed and uncomfortable without clothes, however. So you comment, Today, just for you, we have a stunning gown to wear during your examination! Isnt it lovely? You have demonstrated your sense of humor in an attempt to put the patient at ease and recognize verbally that you know most people are embarrassed by nakedness. You have shown your empathy in a witty manner. The patient responds with a smile and says, I really hate these gowns, you know. And the whole thought of a physical worries me. You have made contact, and the patient told you how she felt. Do you know what to say next? Remember to pick up on the emotion, using empathy. You become serious, and look her in the eyes and say, Oh? What are you worried about?
Maintaining Relationships
As you continue a relationship with a patient, humor helps put the person at ease and may increase cooperation with what you ask the person to do. When you need to give an injection, for example, you might say, I have a soft and little needle for you because youre one of my favorite patients. I promise only a tiny pinch. Lets get this done. Ill be very quick about it. You are implying, Relax, this isnt so terrible. You can trust me. Or before sending a patient to surgery, you could jest, Have a nice trip. Well keep your bed warm for you, and well see you in a little bit. All patients going off to surgery are nervous about it. Humor keeps that anxiety in check. You give a patient condence by these remarks.
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this narrow perspective and reframe a situation. It also helps to restore a sense of motivation. A nurse came to take the pulse of an elderly patient who had just had major surgery. He loved to play bocce ball at the senior citizen club. The patient told the nurse, I wont be able to play anymore. The nurse tried to reassure him verbally without success. But after taking his pulse, the nurse said, I can tell youre a bocce ball player from your heartbeat. He looked surprised and then smiled. You really think Ill be able to play again? In this situation, the patients depression was not so severe that his affect was frozen. He was able to respond to the warmth and caring the nurses humor conveyed. The idea is that if a patient can take a detached view of a situation, the patient can think more objectively and can begin to solve problems.
Patient Education
Humor stimulates people physically and mentally, and its use may make patients more receptive to information and increase their willingness to explore and analyze new ideas.45 Humor can be used to strengthen major points or basic ideas that must be conveyed to the patient during teaching. Humorous information can often be remembered longer and more easily than information presented in a formal manner. Humorous analogies, anecdotes, and parables can help teach family planning and health concepts.46 For example, you might write humorous expressions related to a class topic on name tags, and then have the patients choose a name tag at the beginning of class. The patients can introduce themselves and explain why they chose their particular humorous expression.47 These name tags can be used as ice breakers to help establish a warm and congenial environment, to set the tone for the class, and to put the patients at ease.
Emotional Stability
You can also use humor with other nurses to distance yourself from pain and suffering. In fact, nurses commonly use a macabre form of humor that people outside of nursing may not nd funny. Here is an example. The evening intensive care unit (ICU) nurses were sitting at the conference table and had just nished hearing the day shifts patient report. One of the night nurses had called in sick, and there was no one to replace her. It was going to be a long evening without enough staff and very busy. Eight of 11 patients in the medical ICU were on ventilators, unconscious, and in critical condition. One remarked to the others, Were working in a vegetable garden tonight. The others laughed, and another nurse said, Well, everyone grab your shovels and buckets, and lets get to work. Were good. Well get through it. Everyone laughed again. The joking relieved the frustration by detaching them from the situation. It was a good thing that no family members were around to hear this grim humor. Freud described this as gallows humor, where individuals laugh at death and tragedy to help cope with a morbid situation.43,48-50 CHAPTER SUMMARY Humor and laughter are cost-effective and time-effective patient-safe communication strategies that can be used for health promotion. Nurses are nding ways to use humor and laughter as a means to communicate effectively with patients and prevent patient harm.
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Like other patient-safe strategies, nures need to practice using humor if it is to become integrated into communications within nurse-patient relationships. You must expand your sense of humor by developing an attitude that allows you to see the absurdities in situations, others, and especially in yourself. Still, what is considered funny and amusing to one person may be insulting, tasteless, embarrassing, or emotionally painful to another. It is important never to be insulting with humor and to assess each patient carefully for physical and emotional discomforts before using humor to promote nurse-patient relationships.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, visit DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com Critical Thinking: Analyze the following jokes to determine what the patient is really trying to tell you. What would be an appropriate response to each one? As you clear his uneaten dinner, a 50-year-old male patient says with a smile, That was the most delicious food in the world. My compliments to the chef. A 30-year-old male patient recovering from an appendectomy says, Hey, honey, how about some hug therapy? An 88-year-old woman rocks in her chair and chants, Oh dear, oh dear, if I were dead, I wouldnt be here. She is smiling, alert, and oriented. A surgeon removed the belly button of an 84-year-old woman as he repaired her umbilical hernia. When he makes rounds the next day, she quips to him, Youre a shoemaker! Now, how is my husband supposed to recognize me when I get to heaven? A 50-year-old woman who just had a mastectomy states, All those things ever did was get in the way! A 62-year-old woman tells the neurosurgeon after a craniotomy, Youre a good surgeon but a lousy barber!
References
1. Dugan, D.O. Laughter and Tears: Best Medicine for Stress. Nursing Forum 24:18, 1989. 2. Hoesl, N.L. Laughter: The Drug of Choice: Denitive Doses of the Best Medicine, 2nd ed. Cincinnati, Ohio, LaughterDoc Publications: 2007. 3. Cousins, N. The Anatomy of an Illness, N.Y., Norton: 1979. 4. Cousins, N. The Anatomy of an Illness as Perceived by the Patient: Reections on Healing and Regeneration, N.Y., Norton: 2005. 5. Fosbinder, D. Patient Perceptions of Nursing Care: An Emerging Theory of Interpersonal Competence. Journal of Advanced Nursing 20:1085, 1994. 6. McGhee, P. Rx: Laughter. RN 98:50, 1998. 7. McGhee, P. Health, Healing, and the Amuse System. Dubuque, Iowa, Kendall/Hunt: 1996. 8. Fonnesbeck, B.G. Are You Kidding? Nursing98 28:64, 1998.
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9. Astedt-Kurki, P., Isola, A. Humour Between Nurse and Patient and Among Staff: Analysis of Nurses Diaries. Journal of Advanced Nursing 35:452-458, 2001. 10. Astedt-Kurki, P.I.A., Tammertie, T., Kervinen, U. Importance of Humour to Client-Nurse Relationships and Clients Well-Being. International Journal of Nursing Practice 7:119-125, 2001. 11. Dean, R.A., Gregory D. More Than Trivial: Strategies for Using Humor in Palliative Care. Cancer Nursing 28:292-300, 2005. 12. Wanzer, M., Booth-Buttereld, M., Booth-Buttereld, S. If We Didnt Use Humor, Wed Cry: Humourous Coping Communication in Health Care Settings. Journal of Health Communication 10:105-125, 2005. 13. Finch, L.P. Patients Communication With Nurses: Relational Communication and Preferred Nurse Behaviors. International Journal for Human Caring 10:14-22, 2006. 14. McCreaddie, M., Wiggins, S. The Purpose and Function of Humour in Health, Health Care and Nursing: A Narrative Review. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 61:584-595, 2007. 15. Association for Applied and Therapeutic Humor. Located at: http://www.aath.org/ Accessed December, 2008. 16. MacDonald, P. LaughterThe Best Medicine? Practice Nurse 36:38-39, 2008. 17. Robinson, V: Humor and Health. In McGhee, P.E., Goldstein, J.H. (eds.). Handbook of Humor Research, vol. 2. N.Y., Springer-Verlag, 1983, p 109. 18. Robinson, V.M. Humor and the Health Professions, 2nd ed. Thorofare, N.J. Slack Inc., 1991. 19. Robinson, V. Humor in Nursing. In Carlson, C., Blackwell, B. (eds.). Behavioral Concepts and Nursing Intervention, 2nd ed. Philadelphia, J.B. Lippincott: 1978. 20. Chinery, W. Alleviating Stress With Humor: A Literature Review. Journal of Perioperative Practice 17:172-182, 2007. 21. Westburg, N.G. Hope, Laughter and Humor in Residents and Staff at an Assisted Living Facility. Journal of Mental Health Nursing 25:16-32, 2003. 22. Schmitt, N. Patients Perception of Laughter in a Rehabilitation Hospital. Rehabilitation Nursing 1:143, 1990. 23. Astedt-Kurki, P. Humour in Nursing Care. Journal of Advanced Nursing 20:183,1994. 24. Astedt-Kurki, P., Haggman-Laitila, A. Good Nursing Practice as Perceived by Clients: A Starting Point to the Development of Professional Nursing. Journal of Advanced Nursing 17:1195, 1992. 25. Calman, L. Patients Views of Nurses Competence. Nurse Education Today 26:719-725, 2006. 26. Fenwick, C.R. Love and Laughter: A Healing Journey. Muenster, SK, Canada, St. Peters Press: 2004. 27. Morreall, J. Taking Laughter Seriously. Albany, N.Y., State University of New York Press: 1983. 28. Morreall, J. Humor Works. Amherst, Mass., HRD Press: 1997. 29. Pasquali, E.A. Learning to Laugh: Humor as Therapy. Journal of Psychosocial Nursing 28:31,1990. 30. Martin, R.A. The Psychology of Humor: An Integrative Approach. London, Elsevier: 2006. 31. Ruxton, J.P. Humor Intervention Deserves Our Attention. Holistic Nursing Practice 2:54,1988. 32. Berk, L.S., Tan, S.A. Immune System Changes During Humor Associated With Laughter. Clinical Research 39:124A, 1991. 33. Berk, L.S., Tan, S.A., Fry, W. Eustress of Humor-Associated Laughter Modulates Specic Immune System Components. Annals of Behavioral Medicine 15(Suppl):S111, 1993. 34. Berk, L.S., Tan, S.A. A Positive Emotion, the Eustress of Mirthful Laughter Modulates the Immune System Lymphokine Interferon-Gamma. Psychoneuroimmunology Research Society Annual Meetings, April (Abstract Supplement) 5:A1, 1995. 35. Kimata, H. Differential Effects of Laughter on Allergen-Specic Immunoglobulin and Neurotrophin Levels in Tears. Perceptual and Motor Skills 98:901-908, 2004. 36. Kimata, H. Effects of Humor on Allergen-Induced Wheal Reactions. Journal of the American Medical Association 286:737, 2001. 37. Mazer, E. Ten Sure-Fire Stress Releasers. Prevention 34:104,1989. 38. Diamond, J. Your Body Doesnt Lie. N.Y.,Warner: 1979. 39. Siegel, B. Love, Medicine, and Miracles. N.Y., Harper Perennial: 1990. 40. Hayashi, K., Hayashi, T., Iwangaga, S., et al. Laughter Lowered the Increase in Postprandial Blood Glucose. Diabetes Care 26:1651-1652, 2003. 41. Nevo, O., Keinan, G., Teshimousky-Ardit, M. Humor and Pain Tolerance. International Journal of Humor Research 6:71, 1993. 42. Flavier, J.M. The Lessons of Laughter. World Health Forum 11:412, 1990. 43. Samra, C. A Time to Laugh. Journal of Christian Nursing 3:17, 1985. 44. Lippert, L., Hunt S. An Ethnographic Study of the Role of Humor in Health Care Transactions. Lewiston, N.Y., Edwin Mellen Press: 2005. 45. Freud, S. Jokes and Their Relationship to the Unconscious. In Strachey, J. (ed.). The Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, vol 8. London, Hogarth Press: 1961.
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46. Bastable, S.B. Nurse as Educator: Principles of Teaching and Learning for Nursing Practice, 3rd ed. Sudbury, Mass., Jones & Bartlett: 2008. 47. White, L.A., Lewis, D.J. Humor: A Teaching Strategy to Promote Learning. Journal of Nursing Staff Development 3:60,1990. 48. Williams, H. Humour and Healing: Therapeutic Effects in Geriatrics. Gerontion 1:14,1986. 49. Freud, S. Humor. International Journal of Psychoanalysis 9:1, 1928. 50. Partt, J.M. Humorous Preoperative Teaching. Association of Perioperative Registered Nurses Journal 52:114, 1990.
CHAPTER
10
Key Words
Grief Anticipatory grieving Mourning Sadness Loss Depression
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he purpose of this chapter is to explore patient responses during times of grief, mourning, and loss and appropriate patient-safe strategies as responses to be used within the nurse-patient relationship. A primary focus of this chapter is applying patient-safe communication strategies when a patient or family member cries and during grief, mourning, and loss. These strategies include establishing trust and rapport, using perception checking, and using empathy and other facilitative listening responses. Review the Transformational Model of Communication in Chapter 2, and locate grief, mourning, and loss in the risk factor ring, along with trust and rapport, perception checking, empathy, and facilitative listening responses in the patient-safe strategies ring. For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com The purpose of the exercise is to introduce you to one of the main human responses during grief, mourning, and loss: crying. Many student nurses are uncomfortable when a patient or family member cries, until they learn that crying and tears are natures way of allowing a person to release tension from the body and to communicate a need to be comforted.1 This chapter describes the loss that occurs during each phase of growth and development throughout the life span, the purposes of crying and tears, and patient-safe strategies to promote positive transformational outcomes. In addition, this chapter discusses what not to say when patients and family members cry and concludes with a section on what to do as a nurse when you become close to patients and experience grief along with them.
GRIEF
Grief involves a process that all people experience, usually after the death of a loved one or another signicant loss. Grief is an intense and painful emotional state. Grief work involves the process of working through the emotional reaction to loss and reorganizing lifestyles to accommodate the loss. The emotional reaction may last for an extended period. After the loss of a pet, a person may experience 20 hours of crying. The loss of a spouse, parent, child, or close friend may result in 200 or 300 hours of crying. Tears are common even years after the loss of someone who has been very close.2,3 Anticipatory grief occurs before an actual loss, usually during a long terminal illness. Communication Safety Alert
Tears are benecial. Tears release the sadness, anger, hate, and guilt commonly present with anticipatory grief. In early grief, talking through tears about the nal days with the deceased and reviewing good and bad memories can be therapeutic.
A major loss means that the person must modify his or her belief system to t a new reality. The new reality is that the person must restructure his or her life without the loved one who died. In a grief reaction to signicant loss, a person might say, I just dont know what to believe in anymore. Loss requires a person to say good-bye to someone who has been very important to them. It does not mean to forget or diminish the value of the loved one who died. It means closing the door on what was lost and opening a new door to a new life without the loved one. The grieving person must learn to cope with the loss. Triumph over the loss means the
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person still sees a purpose in living and again becomes actively involved in meaningful activities.1,4,5 Old relationships are modied, and new ones are formed. As time passes, sadness turns into loneliness and eventually into hopefulness. The focus is less on the loss and more on the changes needed to adjust. Successful resolution of the loss gives the survivor a greater understanding of life with greater compassion for suffering and a higher sensitivity to the needs of others.
Grief Work
A grieving person should be allowed to choose whether he or she wants to be around others and participate in activities. The person may need a period of denial and withdrawal. Too long a period, however, may lead to hyperactivity, hostility, depression, changes in relationships with others, and overall decreased ability to function. A grief counselor or support group may be needed to help the patient grieve the loss. A patient who has suffered a loss should be encouraged to grieve and continue to have the emotional support of health-care professionals, family, and friends until the grieving is nished.1,4-6 Communication Safety Alert
Grieving for the death of a loved one may extend over a year and up to 3 years. Throughout grieving, certain people, objects, and occasions evoke memories of the deceased, bringing on feelings of sadness and depression, often with resultant tears to relieve the feelings.1,4-6
Childhood
During early childhood, any separation from the parents is a loss. The child does not know that the parents will return but eventually gains an understanding that parents will return and that the child can love and trust people other than parents. As the child grows, he or
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she becomes increasingly independent. Entering preschool and kindergarten is exciting and frightening because the child loses the security of home, although new experiences, friends, and teachers are gained. Throughout school, the child is promoted from grade to grade, losing familiar teachers and gaining new ones. Friendships break up because interests change, classmates move, or the child may move. Developmental tasks include becoming autonomous from parents, taking the initiative to try new things, and becoming industrious and winning recognition for achievements at school and in extracurricular activities. Children learn to be industious workers at school and home, developing many self-care skills and gradually becoming more self-sufcient.6-9
Adolescence
Promotions to middle school and high school mean giving up many childhood things. Adolescent life events include establishing relationships with members of the opposite sex, graduating, and getting a job. When a relationship ends, teens may feel intense loss, even if the relationship was not sexual and they both agreed to end it. Graduation is a happy event, but it results in the breaking up of many relationships and, in many cases, leaving home. A job is a signicant gain of a new role and an income. If a job is terminated, however, the role and income are lost. The relatively carefree life of childhood and adolescence ends as the adolescent takes on adult responsibilities. The major developmental task of adolescence is to develop a sense of identity and to decide on a career.6-9
Young Adulthood
The young adult struggles for nancial independence, starts a career, forms close sexual relationships, starts a family, and sets up a home. Each event has the potential for satisfaction and happiness but also has the potential for loss. These losses can come from being red; from being divorced; from sustaining property damage through re, theft, ood, or other disaster; from moving and the consequent loss of friends and their support; and from the death of friends or family members. The major developmental task of young adulthood is to develop intimacy in relationships, develop a career, and start a family.6-9
Middle Age
During the middle adult years, many people nd enjoyment in the fruits of their labors but the gains and losses of life continue. Sometimes a promotion means increased salary and prestige but a loss of free time. Expenses peak as children reach college age. A real sense of loss occurs as children leave home to attend school, marry, or get their own apartments. Parents welcome the growing independence of their children, but they experience a loss that the children no longer need them in the same ways. The parent-child relationship changes to an adult-adult relationship. As the last child leaves home, many parentsespecially mothers experience a well-known depressive event called the empty nest syndrome. Although they are joyful at a childs independence, parents miss having the child around as much, and the daily relationship with the child must change. Also, the role of a parent with children to raise is over. Sometimes in middle adulthood, people realize that they may not be able to achieve all the goals they aspired to in their youth. They experience a sense of loss. At some point, a person in middle age faces the realization of lost youth. There are changes in
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body proportions, wrinkles, vision changes, gray hair, sometimes baldness, and the loss of physical stamina. Women must adapt to menopause and the loss of fertility. Although a mans sexual function can continue into his 80s, temporary dysfunction may become more evident at middle age and may be traumatic. Many middle-aged adults adapt to and accept the effects of time. Others experience a midlife crisis and set out to prove that they are still young. Divorces occur as one partner seeks out younger companions. Middle age is especially difcult for people who emphasize youth and sex appeal as a way of life. A major task of middle adults is generativity, which involves guiding the next generation through home, work, and community activities.6-9
Late Adulthood
In late adulthood, losses far outnumber gains. There is continued physical decline in all organ systems, the most noticeable being visual and hearing losses, difculties with mobility, and loss of memory. Friends and family members are lost through moving and death. Retirement can be viewed as a signicant loss of productive activity, loss of income, and loss of relationships. When a person is deemed no longer able to drive or no longer able to live alone, there is a loss of independence, which most elderly people fear keenly. Moving to a retirement home or nursing home involves the loss of ones home and all that was familiar in that environment. After major losses, many people experience a signicant decline in health. In preparation for death, even though life has been very productive and full, elderly people fear losing their minds, losing control of their lives, becoming a burden, and having more pain than they can bear. The primary task of the older adult is to develop a sense of ego integrity in which the person can look back on life with a sense of satisfaction and acceptance of impending death.6-9 Learning how to deal with loss is one of lifes most difcult and most important lessons. At each stage of growth and development, people must learn to recognize their feelings and then work through the emotions as they react to the losses. Communication Safety Alert
Depending on the loss and its meaning to the individual, a person may also experience a loss of security, self-esteem, a belief system, or faith.
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and development and assess the growth and development of patients prior to the present health situation. Once you understand what was going on in their lives, you recognize that patients may have experienced signicant losses that affect the current situation. Thus, you develop patient and family background data to form the basis for showing empathy and understanding the meaning of sickness or death to patients and family members in their current situation. One of the most typical patient responses to grief, mourning, and loss is crying. Before describing patient-safe strategies used to promote postive transformational outcomes, you must understand the nature and meaning of crying and tears. People shed tears for many specic reasons, but there is usually some form of loss involved.
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In most circumstances, people shed tears to release tensions that are associated with loss. Tensions associated with loss lead to such physiological symptoms as tightness in the chest, choking, shortness of breath, sighing, empty feelings in the stomach, and feelings of weakness.1,10 These feelings are very distressing. Tears must ow in order to release such tensions and to resolve the physiological ramications.
A Good Cry
Weeping helps a person feel better because tears can reduce perceived emotional pain levels and can actually create pleasant sensations. Tears are therapeutic because they are a cathartic coping mechanism that helps resolve feelings of loss, grief, fear, frustration, and anger. There are chemicals in tears that help to reduce stress.1,11,12 If the tears are shut off and the emotional pain is ignored, the tensions are not released, and the waste chemicals excreted in tears remain trapped in the body. It is also healthy to release tensions through tears in close relationships. Tears can break down barriers and build stronger bonds in relationships.11,12 By releasing stress-related tensions and hormones, crying produces a relaxation response. Initially, tears stimulate the sympathetic nervous system, causing the release of catecholamines that increase blood pressure and heart rate. This arousal is followed by a parasympathetic response that generates a state of systemic relaxation. Sobbing leads to respiratory relaxation by producing diaphragmatic breathing patterns instead of the thoracic tension-producing breathing pattern associated with the ght-or-ight response. We feel pleasantly drained after a good long cry.2,3
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communication mechanism that enables the patient to mourn life losses actively. Patients value the supportive presence of the nurse and feelings of outside acceptance related to the flow of tears. Communication Safety Alert
Use of empathy and facilitative listening are the main patient-safe communication strategies as described in earlier chapters. Health-care providers need to allow the expression of tears to relieve tension, and then listen to the patients feelings and concerns.
For example, during rounds you nd an elderly woman patient sitting in bed with tears in her eyes and on her cheeks. You have no idea what could be the matter. Without any other information to go on, you estimate at this point that she is mildly upset. The basic empathic approach is always to deal with the emotion rst. Let the emotion be recognized. So you say, I can see that youre upset, and offer her a tissue. Next, you sit down so you are on the same level with the patient. Make eye contact, and prepare to use active listening skills. Also use touch, such as a hug or a hand on the patients hand or arm as you say, Whats going on? or What are these tears about? Follow that with a smile and Im a good listener. As the patient speaks, nod and use facilitators, such as restatement and clarication, to get a clear picture of the patients view of her situation. Resist all temptation to interrupt, give advice, change the subject, or give a pep talk. Listen as she tells you as she continues to shed tears that she has a son who does not have time to come and see her as often as she would like. She explains that he is working and has his own family and that she misses him and his family. Her husband died a year ago as well, and she misses him, too. She adds, Im just sitting here feeling blue. To respond with empathy, say something like, I can see you miss them, and youre probably feeling a bit lonely. Then encourage her to talk about her son or her husband. For example, you could say, When was the last time you saw your son or his family? or How long were you married? You are showing your interest in her situation by asking these questions. Although you can do nothing to change the patients situation, you have helped her to feel better by allowing her to release emotions through tears and words. The patient recognizes that you care about her enough to take a few minutes to listen to her situation and empathize with her. What about a person who is angry and weeps at the same time? Consider, for example, a 30-year-old woman who has been married for 5 years. She was in the gynecology clinic when she was told she had gonorrhea by the physician. The nurse was going to teach her about the disease, its transmission, its prevention, and the importance of obtaining information about her sexual partners. Just as the nurse began, the patient became angry and shouted, How could he do this to me? She was crying and cursing at the same time, as she paced back and forth. The nurse remained calm, without judging or arguing. The nurse showed acceptance of the crying and cursing, as she waited for the patient to regain control. Explosive emotions involve underlying feelings of helplessness and hurt.1 The nurses presence and silence were ways of showing acceptance while the patient was releasing emotional tension by blowing off steam. Silence also helps a patient collect her thoughts.
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Then the patient sat down and began to sob. The nurse sat next to her and took her hand. I know youre hurting, she said, recognizing verbally the pain the woman was feeling over her husbands betrayal. The patient was able to talk more calmly but was still crying, Im sorry Ive behaved so badly. I just dont know what Im supposed to do now. The nurse says, Im here for you, and we can figure out together what you can do now. When someone is extremely upset and in great emotional pain, the emotions need to be expressed. Listen to the persons story with empathy. The nurse needs to be open and accepting so that the patient can release emotional tension and begin to think about the problem and what to do next.
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family (guilt), I promise that everything will be ne (false reassurance), or You shouldnt feel that way (judgmental). With respect to bereavement after the death of a loved one, people who prefer to avoid the emotions that result in crying may also choose certain expressions to convey condolences after the death of a loved one. These expressions deny the importance of the grief or imply that the person has no right to grieve the loss. These comments include, You must be strong, which implies that only weak people show grief; You must be a man about this, which implies that men and boys should not cry or grieve; and It is time to get on with your life, which implies that grieving should consume a certain amount of time, after which the person no longer has a right to grieve. Communication Safety Alert
If you can hear yourself making any of the above statements, then you do not understandand are not trying to understandthe feelings of people who are crying. Your best course of action is to erase these comments permanently from your list of appropriate things to say when someone is crying or at any other time.
These remarks might help you feel better, but they are not patient-safe communication strategies of empathy and facilitative listening; they block expression of emotions; and the patient will not want to talk with you. You will silence the patient, and trust and rapport will be gone. In addition, as previously discussed, you should never offer false hope or make promises you cannot keep. Sometimes, if, in a health-care providers opinion, patients become too upset, crying and tears may be treated with medications. In some cases, medications may be useful if they help people become more ready to discuss problems. Overmedication does not allow, however, for the release of painful emotions and the examination of underlying emotional pain. Drugs may provide an easy way to quiet a person and perhaps help the person to sleep, but loss and grief remain unresolved. To help a patient resolve grief, a patient needs to be able to express feelings.
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You must acknowledge that you can never be in total control of your life and that some events are beyond your control. Once you make this acknowledgment, it is easier to deal with the fear, guilt, and anger caused by a loss over which you have no control. You must also acknowledge your own mortality and that life as you know it can end at any moment. We all recognize that not everyone lives to the average age of death, which is near 80 years. The reection exercises at the end of the chapter are especially designed to help you as a health-care provider recognize your own vulnerability to grief and loss. CHAPTER SUMMARY This chapter describes grief, mourning, and loss that occur not only over the death of loved ones but also during each stage of growth and development throughout life. Tears are a natural and effective way to release the tension that accompanies sadness, grief, anger, and fear. A sense of loss is the overriding feeling that leads to crying and tears. Nursing a patient who feels a loss involves helping the person to feel bad. It means helping the patient experience painful emotions so that the person can experience the benets of releasing tensions through tears. It also means listening supportively to the patient and family as they verbalize emotional pain. Patient-safe communication with a crying patient means that you avoid expressing disapproval or minimizing the cause for crying.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Reective Practice. Write a one-page summary of a significant loss you experienced. You may describe any loss, such as the loss of body image, loss of a loved one, or loss of a job. What were your feelings during the experience? What were your behaviors during the experience? How did you resolve your feelings of loss? 2. Critical Thinking. Break the class into small groups to discuss and summarize the feelings, behaviors, and ways of resolving feelings of loss identified in the first exercise. Have a designated leader tell the class the summary findings from each group. 3. Reection. Use the following exercise to think about your own mortality. Suppose you are in a car accident and die tomorrow. List the relationships that would be lost. What should be done with your body? Would you want a funeral or memorial service? What would you want done with your property? List the uncompleted tasks you would leave behind. List activities that you should not put off any longer.
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References
1. Wolfelt, A.D. Companioning the Bereaved: A Soulful Guide for Caregivers. Fort Collins, Colo., Companion Press: 2006. 2. Dugan, D. Laughter and Tears: Best Medicine for Stress. Nursing Forum 24:18, 1989. 3. Ltz, T. Crying : The Natural and Cultural History of Tears. N.Y., Norton: 2001. 4. Kbler-Ross, E. To Live Until We Say Goodbye. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall: 1978. 5. Kbler-Ross, E., Kessler, D. On Grief and Grieving: Finding the Meaning of Grief Through the Five Stages. Riverside, N.J., Simon and Schuster: 2005. 6. Milliken, M.E. Understanding Human Behavior, 7th ed. Albany, N.Y., Delmar: 2004. 7. Erikson, E.H. Childhood and Society, 2nd ed. N.Y., Norton: 1963 (reissued 1993). 8. Erikson, E.H. The Life Cycle Completed. N.Y., Norton: 1998. 9. Harder, A.F. The Developmental Stages of Erik Erikson. Located at http://www.learningplaceonline.com/stages/organize/Erikson.htm Accessed January, 2009. 10. Schulz, R. The Psychology of Death, Dying, and Bereavement. Reading, Mass., Addison-Wesley: 1978. 11. Glass, L. He Says, She Says: Closing the Communication Gap Between the Sexes. N.Y., Berkley: 1993. 12. Glass, L. I Know What Youre Thinking: Using the Four Codes of Reading People to Improve Your Life. Hoboken, N.J., John Wiley & Sons: 2003. 13. Holman C. Living Bereavement: An Exploration of Healthcare Workers Responses to Loss and Grief in an NHS Continuing Care Ward for Older People. International Journal of Older People Nursing 3:278-281, 2008.
CHAPTER
11
Key Words
Health-care literacy Cognitive knowledge Affective dispositions Psychomotor behavioral capabilities Principles of teaching-learning Teaching plan
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n this chapter, principles and strategies of patient-safe communication are applied to a very important nursing role responsibility: patient education. Patient-safe communication is a foundation of patient education. Health literacy is the aim of patient education. Health information can be confusing for anyone. Health literacy is the degree to which individuals have the ability to obtain, understand and process basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions.1 Patient-safe communication is used by health professionals as they teach a patient how to obtain, understand, and process health information so that the patient is able to make informed decisions. For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com Patient-safe communication is necessary during health education for the patient to gain an understanding of health-related issues and act on health information. Low health literacy impairs the ability to navigate within the health-care environment, impairs communications between patients and health-care providers, and inadvertently leads to substandard medical care.2-4 Patient-safe communication during health education is needed to bridge the gap between the patients lack of ability to understand and apply health-care information and the required cognitive knowledge, affective behaviors, and psychomotor skills needed for high levels of health-care literacy. The lack of health literacy costs billions of dollars annually in terms of health-care expenditures.5 Millions of North Americans cannot effectively obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make informed health-care decisions and follow treatment instructions.2-6 Low health literacy results in higher rates of disease and mortality and increased rates of hospitalization because people do not know when to seek health-care services, how to obtain needed treatments, and how to manage their health care at home effectively. For example, people with low literacy may wait too long to obtain health care when ill and then need to be hospitalized, which costs much more than had they sought care earlier and been treated in an outpatient clinic. Most patients hide their confusion because they are too intimidated or too ashamed to ask for help.4 To improve public health literacy, programs have been instituted through such agencies as the U.S. National Patient Safety Foundation and Canadian Manitoba Institute for Public Safety. The aim of these public programs, intended as a service for everyone living in the United States and Canada, is to teach people how to engage the services of healthcare providers and learn how to interact with them. Through public media, these programs emphasize health-care providers want everyone to ask questions for their own safety, not to be intimidated or ashamed about a lack of knowledge.7 Everyone is encouraged to ask three simple questions8: 1. What is my main problem? 2. What do I need to do? 3. Why is it important for me to do this? You will need to integrate all of the communication principles and patient-safe communication strategies described in this book when educating patients for high levels of health-care literacy so that patients feel comfortable in asking questions.
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Cognitive Knowledge
Cognitive knowledge is knowing what to do to care for oneself and how to do it. The cognitive knowledge required to change behavior includes intellectual skills and the ability to comprehend and to apply knowledge to ones lifestyle. By telling a patient, for example, You must reduce your cholesterol, exercise, check your blood pressure, and stop smoking, you assume that a patient has the cognitive knowledge to accomplish those goals and that the patient is sufficiently motivated to apply the knowledge to make the lifestyle changes. These assumptions can add up to a big mistake.
Affective Dispositions
Affective dispositions are the attitudes, emotions, interests, and values the patient has concerning health education that result in required changes in behavior and lifestyle. The nurse can teach the patient cognitive knowledge, but as teaching occurs the nurse must consider if the patient is motivated to make the changes and if the patient has support systems if he or she cannot perform the needed activites alone.
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and diet. In addition to using these basic guidelines, make sure you read and critique any patient education literature you plan to give to the patient.
Medications
All patients and family caretakers need to know the names and dosages of each drug the patient must take. They must know what the drugs are for, what time the drugs should be taken, and how the drugs should be taken. They must know the common side effects of each drug and which side effects should prompt a call to the physician or nurse practitioner. To reinforce your teaching about medications, each time you give any pill, check the patients knowledge by asking, What is this for? Also ask, When do you take this at home? It takes only a few minutes if you plan to integrate education into whatever you are doing.
Environment
Often, a patients environment will need to be modied to accommodate the health problem. For example, the patients home environment might need to be modied by obtaining a portable toilet if the patient with heart problems cannot go up and down the stairs. Take time to consider the modications your patients environment will need. Ensure the patient has the means to pay for whatever is needed. Many types of equipment and medications are very expensive, and some patients may not have equipment or prescription benets in their health-care plans. You may have to teach the patient how to get nancial assistance to pay for the required care. If you are not familiar with types of nancial aid, then make a referral to someone in your own agency or outside agency. Family members must be prepared to adapt as well so they do not expect too much or too little of the patients functional abilities. Include the family in whatever teaching you give the patient whenever possible. Assess family reactions and responses just as you assess those of the patient. Family members may have to provide care for the patient and may have signicant alterations in typical roles they play. If the family is not able to care for the patient at home, the patient may require home health care or placement in a long-term care facility.
Treatments
Treatments include any procedures that the patient and family must learn to do. For example, the patient may need to learn how to perform a self-injection or a self-catheterization; the family may need to change a dressing or administer oxygen. Teaching involves demonstration of how to do the procedure and always includes a return demonstration by the patient or a family member. Also included in the teaching is how to obtain supplies needed for the procedure.
Health Knowledge
The patient needs cognitive knowledge of the health problem, including important details of the disease and the signs and symptoms that require immediate attention. For example, a patient with congestive heart failure needs to know that the heart is not pumping as efciently as it used to. To keep track of this condition, the patient should monitor weight,
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look for swelling in the ankles, and watch for shortness of breath and feelings of chest tightness or pain. These are all signs that the heart is not pumping efciently. In addition, the patient will need to know about any activity limitations created by the condition. Telling a patient, Go home, and take it easy, is a classic educational blunder. Exactly what does take it easy mean? Another activity guide that is vague yet often told to patients is, You can do only light activities. You need to be specific. Give some examples. Exercise guidelines are very important. For example, directions include walking around in the home. Usually after major surgery or childbirth, a patient can resume (or start) a regular exercise schedule in about 6 weeks. Sexual activities must also be discussed. For example, with prostate surgery, rectovaginal surgery, or childbirth, it may take 5 to 6 weeks before it is safe to resume sexual activity to allow healing and avoid infection. Driving is a very important activity to be discussed. For example, patients must not drive while taking pain medications that act as central nervous system depressants. Other drugs may require a period of adjustment before the patient can drive safely or operate dangerous equipment (such as an electric saw). When the patient can return to work is also very important. Return varies with the type of exertion required on the job. In most cases, an ofce worker can return sooner than a laborer. In some situations, patients may need some form of occupational therapy or job retraining, and you will need to make appropriate referrals.
Outpatient/Inpatient Referrals
The patient and family must be informed about when they should be seen again by a health-care provider. In addition, the patient may need referrals to community agencies for supportive services, such as the American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, ostomy organizations, mastectomy organizations, and so on. When making referrals or telling patients about an appointment at a certain date and time, do not assume that they own a car or know how to drive. They may need a family members help or a community transportation service.
Diet
Patients and families need to be aware of special diets to be followed. Dietary restrictions and sample menus should be provided, and they should receive counseling from a dietitian as necessary.
TEACHING-LEARNING PRINCIPLES
Teaching always begins by assessing the learner.
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1. Emotional state (mood, body language, eye contact, facial expressions) 2. Patients life experience (previous experiences with health care) 3. Family (mood of family members; are family members supportive?) 4. Patient age (how has health problem interfered with growth and development?) 5. Relations with health-care providers (what is the patient/family level of understanding of the health problem; are they satised with the care given)? 6. Self-esteem and body image (changes in physical appearance; changes in activity) 7. Cultural (religious preference and practices; favorite foods; years lived in the region; travel outside the region) 8. Gender (style of speech) Note: Information is obtained by observing verbal and nonverbal behaviors and making inferences as you and the patient work toward accomplishing objectives.
As you go into a room with teaching as your goal, always nd out rst what the patients immediate mood, thoughts, and needs are; you will need to address these rst. Afterward, the patient will be much more willing and able to learn. For instance, suppose you enter a patients room and nd out that she is in pain. You will need to do something to control the pain before you can start to teach. A person in pain cannot concentrate. Once you have managed basic needs and concerns, you can begin teaching by determining how well she understands the health-care problem you will be discussing. To help keep your teaching focused, you will want to ask the patient open-ended questions about the health problem she is experiencing. Allow the patient to express herself freely; doing so may give you an idea about what concerns her the most, and that will be where you need to start teaching. Communication Safety Alert
Patients will be self-motivated to address their most urgent concerns and will tune in closely to what you are trying to teach in those areas.
Especially important is the assessment of past experiences with illness and injury. Address any misconceptions or fears the patient may have. It is especially relevant to nd out about previous experiences that relate directly to the behaviors you are asking the patient to change. Teaching methods must be selected to facilitate active participation. Learning is faster and retention is better with the active involvement of the learner. Lecturing is not appropriate because it allows no interaction, placing the learner in a dependent and passive role.12 To teach psychomotor skills, you will need to use demonstrations. The patient becomes actively involved in giving return demonstrations to validate learning.
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A prime consideration is the patients reading level. Many patients who are illiterate may be too embarrassed to admit it. One of ve adults reads at a fth-grade level or lower. A tactful way to evaluate reading is to ask, Do you like to read? If the answer is no, you will need to nd another way to present the information without embarrassing the person. If the patient wears glasses, does he or she have them on? Most people older than 40 have special glasses for reading. Although there is patient teaching literature readily available on almost any topic, you must evaluate rst whether the patient can read it and then comprehend and apply it to his or her personal situation. Assess Readiness to Learn You will also need to determine whether the patient is ready, willing, and able to learn. If the person is in pain, tired, hungry, anxious, fearful, in denial, or distracted, you are wasting time by trying to teach; learning will not take place. Say, for example, that a patient came up from the cardiac catheterization lab around noon. The patient was tired after being in the lab for about 3 hours for testing. The patient was also hungry because he was not allowed to eat before the test and lunch had not yet been delivered. The patient also was uncomfortable because he had to stay in bed and lie still with a pressure dressing and sandbag on the leg that had been catheterized. At that point, the dietitian walked in, pulled up a chair, and started teaching him about a
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low-fat, low-salt cardiac diet. How much do you imagine the patient learned about the diet? Probably nothing. If the health-care provider had assessed the patient first and applied basic principles of teaching, he would have known to leave this patient alone until he had eaten and rested. The patient was polite and said nothing, although some patients might have said, Im tired, hungry, and uncomfortable. Can you come back later when I can actually hear what youre trying to tell me? Even if the patient does not speak, you will have clues to learning readiness. If at any point during a teaching session, a patients eyes glaze over, you have lost that patient. You can make the most of your time and the patients time by incorporating teaching into your ongoing patient care. Each time you are with a patient, you can teach and validate what has been taught before. As you change a dressing, you can discuss wound care or signs and symptoms of infection. Take action at every teachable moment. In addition, keep the time between learning the information and applying the information as short as possible to help the patient retain the information. You can also make the most of your time by involving the patients family in the teaching. Have family members present whenever possible. They can reinforce instructions.
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example, Lets review a little bit so I know that I clearly explained the signs of bladder infection to you. Can you tell me what signs you should watch for that might mean you have an infection in your bladder? Another excellent way to find out what a patient has learned is by making up a brief scenario that relates to the patients life and then asking how the patient would handle it. You can evaluate both cognitive and affective forms of learning with oral questions. Return demonstrations are the only way to evaluate performance of a psychomotor skill.
Emotions
You should recognize and empathize with emotions when working with a patient. Evaluate the patients emotional state rst before teaching or doing anything else. Emotions are a prime consideration as you communicate, either when teaching or attempting any other form of communication. For example, if the patient is extremely anxious, you need to reduce anxiety prior to attempting teaching.
Defense Mechanisms
A patient who is in denial about an illness or rationalizing about why he or she cannot do something will need to get beyond that point before any behavioral changes can be made.
Physiological Problems
A patients physiological state can interfere with learning also. When someone is tired, hungry, in pain, nauseated, or vomiting, you will need to postpone your lesson until the physiological problem has been resolved.
Cultural Barriers
Often, patients and family members have values that differ from yours and those of other health-care providers. For example, say you explain to an Amish man that he needs an electric implanted debrillator to control his heart arrhythmia or he will die. Amish people do not have electricity in their homes, and they believe modern conveniences are the work of the devil. This patient may choose to die rather than have an electrical device implanted in his body. Sometimes you will need to accept a patients beliefs and avoid trying to impose the values of the medical community on him. All teaching is geared toward the lifestyle of the patient, which includes the patients culture.
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Assessment
Suppose you have assessed that a patient has a knowledge decit about his newly diagnosed diabetes and the need to take insulin. He rst wants to learn about insulin and how to give his own injections. He is 55 years old, has a college degree, has been an investment broker for the past 25 years, and wants to get back to work as soon as possible. He is motivated to learn, he likes to read, and his family is supportive. His wife wants to attend nutrition classes to learn the new diet and how to modify the way she currently cooks. The patients insurance plan covers prescription medications and the supplies needed for injecting insulin.
Teaching Strategies
Next, you must plan the teaching strategies that will meet the objectives. The strategies discussed in the following sections are grouped according to whether learning objectives are cognitive, affective, or psychomotor.
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Cognitive Objectives Cognitive knowledge is usually taught using printed and audiovisual materials. These include books, pamphlets, lms, programmed instruction, and computer learning. Learners can proceed at their own pace, and the nurse does not need to be present during learning. Cognitive knowledge can also be learned when you give explanations and descriptions in a lecture to the patient and family members. You control the content and the pace of the instruction; however, the learner is passive and will retain less information than when being an active participant in the learning process. In addition, cognitive knowledge may be gained by encouraging the patient to ask questions. Conrm that each question has been answered by asking the learner, Does that answer your question? Affective and Cognitive Objectives Affective and cognitive knowledge can be gained from one-to-one discussion that permits the introduction of sensitive issues and encourages participation by the learner. You can provide immediate reinforcement and as much repetition as needed until the patient learns the objectives of the lesson. Group discussions may also be useful to attain affective and cognitive objectives when the members support each other, share their ideas and concerns, and problem-solve together. Role playing is a teaching strategy that encourages the expression of attitudes, values, and emotions, and it allows active involvement by the learner. In addition, affective and cognitive behaviors may be learned by the teaching strategy of discovery, which involves guiding the patient through practice situations requiring the patient to solve problems surrounding the diagnosis or treatments. When the patient is an active participant, the retention of information is higher. Psychomotor Objectives Psychomotor skills are taught by demonstrations accompanied by explanations. You must give very clear and specic directions, and show patients what they must do. Demonstrations must be accompanied by the teaching strategy of guided practice. The patient must have hands-on experience, with repetition and immediate feedback from you.
Implementation of Teaching
After developing the plan, it is now time for patient-nurse interaction. Make sure to choose a good time for the interaction. A good time might be after breakfast, after the patient has slept well, when the patient has no discomforts and is ready to learn. This environment is optimal. Order the learning activities by starting with the basics. For example, you are teaching the patient to self-administer insulin subcutaneously. Give the patient pamphlets, and tell the patient that you will return in an hour to talk about questions. When you return, answer the questions, and have a one-to-one discussion regarding affective behaviors. Next, take the patient to a small classroom where the movie and equipment are prepared ahead of time. Play the movie, give a live demonstration, and follow this up with practice by the patient on a mannequin. Last, have the patient self-inject insulin the next time it is due to be given. In addition, use simple everyday language, avoiding medical terminology whenever possible. There is a big difference between saying Lets talk about hypoglycemia and signs and symptoms of insulin shock and saying Lets talk about what to do when you have low blood sugar and feel shaky or light-headed.
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Last is the evaluation of your teaching methods. Was the timing of your teaching appropriate? Were your strategies effective? Was the amount of information appropriate? You can ask your patient for insight either verbally or in writing. By evaluating oral or written responses, you can tell whether your objectives were met. Other characteristics of effective teaching include the ability to hold the patients interest and the ability to make the patient a partneran active participantin the teaching and learning process. Good teachers are also optimistic, positive, nonthreatening, and supportive of a positive self-concept in learners. They help patients believe they can accomplish all objectives. Good teachers typically use several methods of teaching that are appropriate for the objectives and the learning style of the patient. CHAPTER SUMMARY This chapter describes basic principles of teaching and learning required for effective patient education. The nurse develops patient educational objectives that are focused on the cognitive knowledge, affective dispositions, and behavioral capabilities pertaining to the patients specific health state and required knowledge needed for self-care. Knowledge of how to perform a learning assessment, develop a teaching plan, implement
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teaching, and evaluate learning are essential patient-safe strategies to educate patients and families using high-level communication competency. Also, it is important to evaluate the effectiveness of the teaching strategies and then modify teaching strategies as needed for patients and families to attain learning outcomes. Health literacy is the intended result of patient education.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Patient Education Practice and Critical Thinking. The following three patients are newly diagnosed with diabetes and require insulin to control the disease. The nurse must teach each of the three patients about administering insulin to themselves safely. Each has a special learning need. For each patient, address the following three questions: What other assessment data would you like to know about the patient? What patient-safe strategies would you use to obtain the needed assessment information? How would you customize the goals, objectives, teaching strategies, and evaluation methods for each patient? Patient 1 is legally blind. Patient 2 has been up all night because of a noisy roommate and feels very tired. Patient 3 exclaims,I get queasy and feel like fainting whenever I look at that needle! 2. Critical Thinking. Amanda Severt is 35 years old and is being treated for an overactive thyroid. Your assessment reveals that she is weak and tired and has lost 30 pounds. She is 56 and weighs 110 pounds, even though she eats an enormous amount of food. She is taking medication, but you would like to teach her about increasing her calorie intake to gain weight. You are to provide nutritional teaching. Where do you start? 3. Communication Practice. As a class activity to practice patient-safe strategies and patient teaching, role-play the above-mentioned situations in front of the class. One student can be the nurse, the other student can be the patient, and the interaction can be evaluated by the entire class.
References
1. Healthy People 2010. Washington, D.C., U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Ofce of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. 2. Berkman, N.D., DeWalt, D.A., Pignone, M.P., et al. Literacy and Health Outcomes: Summary, Evidence Report, Technology Assessment, number 87. AHRQ Publication Number 04-E007-1. Rockville, Md., Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: January 2004. Located at http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/ epcsums/litsum.htm Accessed January, 2009. 3. Schwartzberg, J.G., VanGeest, J.B., Wang, C.C. (eds.). Understanding Health Literacy: Implications for Medicine and Public Health. Atlanta, American Medical Association Press: 2005.
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4. Abrams, M., American Medical Association. Health Literacy and Patient Safety: Help Patients Understand: Removing Barriers to Better, Safer Care: Reducing the Risk by Designing a Safer, Shame-Free Healthcare Environment. Atlanta, American Medical Association Press: 2007. 5. Potter, L., Martin, C. Health Literacy Fact Sheets. Center for Healthcare Strategies: 2005. Located at http://www.chcs.org/publications3960/publications_show.htm?doc_id=291711 Accessed January, 2009. 6. Canadian Public Health Association. National Literacy and Health Program. Located at http://www.nlhp.cpha.ca/ Accessed January, 2009. 7. Manitoba Institute for Public Safety. Its Safe to Ask. Located at http://www.safetoask.ca/ Accessed January, 2009. 8. Partnership for Clear Health Communication at the National Patient Safety Foundation. Ask Me 3. Located at http://www.npsf.org/askme3/ Accessed January, 2009. 9. DeYoung, S. Teaching Strategies for Nurse Educators, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, N.J., Pearson/ Prentice-Hall: 2009. 10. Knowles, M.S. The Modern Practice of Adult Education: From Pedagogy to Androgogy. Wilton, Conn., Association Press: 1980. 11. Knowles, M.S., Holton, E.F., Swanson, R.A. The Adult Learner: The Denitive Classic in Adult Education and Human Resource Development, 6th ed. Burlington, Mass., Elsevier: 2005. 12. Bastable, S.B. Nurse as Educator: Principles of Teaching and Learning for Nursing Practice. Sudbury, Mass., Jones and Bartlett: 2008. 13. Huey, R. Discharge Planning: Good Planning Means Fewer Hospitalizations for the Chronically Ill. Nursing 81:1120, 1981. 14. Schuster, P.M. Concept Mapping: A Critical-Thinking Apprach to Care Planning, 2nd ed. Philadelphia, FA Davis: 2008. 15. Willingham, D.T. Practice Makes PerfectBut Only If You Practice Beyond the Point of Perfection. American Educator 38:31-33, 2004.
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Health-Care Team Communication: Group Processes and Patient-Safe Communication Among Team Members
CHAPTER
12
Key Terms
Patient monitoring Coordination of care Continuity in care Care transitions Human factors Human strengths Human limitations Human error Error Automatic mode Mixed mode Conscious mode Error of execution Error of decision making Skill-based error Rule-based error Knowledge-based error Slips Lapses Mistakes Violations Mental model Situational awareness Working memory System Systems perspective Performance inputs Process Performance outputs Active failure Latent condition Error-provoking conditions Person approach Systems approach 159
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he purpose of this chapter is to describe the characteristics of patient safety communication risk factors encountered during intradisciplinary (nurse-nurse) communications and interdisciplinary (nurseother discipline) communications within nursing work systems. Over the past decade, communication failures between health-care team members have become widely recognized as a leading safety hazard in health care,1 hampering the ability to deliver safe, high-quality care. This chapter explores the growing evidence that factors in the health-care system and nursing work environment are the major contributors to communication failures between members of the health-care team. From this broad perspective, nurses can learn how communication failures happen, recognize risks for communication failure in their work environment, use patient-safe communication strategies specic to working with members of the health-care team, and advocate for health-care system improvements to keep patients safe. Review Figure 2.5, and identify communication risk factors involving intradisciplinary and interdisciplinary communications in the Transformational Model of Communication. Nurses represent the largest discipline within the health-care workforce and provide the greatest amount of direct patient care and integration of patient care services across the professions. They are uniquely positioned to communicate essential patient information with other members of the health-care team.
Patient Monitoring
A primary activity and role of nurses is ongoing patient monitoring. Patient monitoring is the ongoing assessment and evaluation of patient health status and involves the purposeful acquisition, interpretation, and synthesis of patient information for clinical decision making.2 It is an important surveillance mechanism for detecting errors, detecting early deterioration of patient health status, and preventing harmful events.3 Performance of patient monitoring requires great attention, knowledge, and responsiveness on the part of the nurse,3 and the ndings must be carefully communicated orally to other team members and documented on patient records. With the early recognition and effective communication of the deterioration in patient health status, there is rapid initiation of coordinated activities to restore patient health.
Coordination of Care
In addition to monitoring patients, nurses serve as the coordinator or integrator of patient care and services from multiple members of the health-care team. Nurses coordinate the scheduling and implementation of all treatments and therapies of physicians, pharmacists, dietitians, social workers, and other members of the health-care team. Updates in patient health status from incoming information, such as laboratory results, or changes in the treatment plans are communicated by nurses as appropriate. Nurses review patient records to detect gaps in information and take action to implement changes in treatment plans
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through communication with other health-care team members. Failure to communicate timely and accurate treatment updates during coordination of care results in treatment delays and can jeopardize patient health.4
The Person Approach Versus the Systems Approach to Patient Care Errors
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, To Err is HumanBuilding a Safer Health System8 reported that health care is not as safe as it should be and described tens of thousands of people who die annually from medical errors in hospitals. Analyses of over 2000 medical errors revealed that 70% was the result of communication failure and, of these, approximately 75% of patients died.9 One of the main conclusions from the IOM report was that the majority of errors in health care was the result of faulty systems, processes, and conditions that led individuals to make mistakes rather than the result of individual recklessness.8 People working in healthcare are among the most dedicated workforce in any industry. The problem is not bad people; the problem is that the system needs to be made safer.10 The IOM claimed that the focus must shift from blaming individuals for patient care errors (person approach) to a focus on preventing future errors by designing safety into the health-care system at all levels (systems approach). The IOM opened the door for health-care team members and organizational leaders to understand errors as a symptom of an unsafe system. Viewing errors from a systems perspective takes into consideration how factors within the system itself affect human performance, which can lead to patient care errors. Improving safety from a systems perspective is important because no matter where you choose to work, you will be working within a system that has safety issues. Trying to be more careful and more cautious will do little if safety issues in the system remain unresolved.10 By understanding the systems approach taken by the IOM, you will have a broader focus both on identifying the underlying safety issues and recommending improvements for safety that address these issues. Implementing change through a systems perspective, rather than reacting to errors as they occur, is the only way far-reaching quality improvements in safety can be achieved.10 Competencies for health-care team members related to systems thinking and patient safety include but are not limited to11: Understanding system design and its impact on safety Risk awareness through anticipating and recognizing problems at the level of individuals and of systems Correcting safety issues to prevent them from reaching the patient
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Collectively, the competencies afford nurses and other team members with opportunities to help build a safer health-care system. To attain these competencies, health-care providers need to examine the relationships among people, job performance requirements, and the work environment using a human factors science theoretical perspective. Human factors science is the study of the t between the tasks that people do and the work environment.
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to minimize the occurrence of errors and limit their consequences.22,23 The study of how human errors occur has led to the development of normal cognition theory to explain how humans think during the performance of activities.
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thin with severe contractures, making it difcult for you to hear her blood pressure using an adult cuff. There is no pediatric cuff available, and you remember that you could perform a palpation blood pressure. You consciously verify the solution is appropriate because the patient has good pulses. You had to develop a new rule for how to take a blood pressure when a patient has contractures. You can then apply this new rule when you encounter this situation in the future. You have added to your mental model of how to obtain a blood pressure.
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Knowledge-based mistakes: Knowledge-based mistakes occur because of lack of knowledge, information, or misinterpretation of the problem. Individuals do not have a mental model or automatic solution in long-term memory. They have to develop a mental model of the current situation, which is nearly always incomplete. Certain habits of thought alter conscious reasoning and contribute to this process. One such process is biased memory, in that individuals perceive by what they know. They interpret novel situations within this biased framework. Recall from perception theory in Chapter 3 that people cannot experience the world directly; rather, they interpret it. Therefore, in new situations, health-care providers interpret the patient situation only by what they already know. Another process of knowledge-based mistakes is the tendency to xate on a particular guess or hunch about what is occurring in a situation. This is known as conrmation bias, described by Sir Francis Bacon more than 300 years ago.28 With conrmation bias, individuals have the tendency to look for evidence that supports what they believe to be occurring and supports their hunch and ignore information that contradicts it. Health-care providers will see the information they expect that conrms their expectations, rather than see the information that is actually present that contradicts what they expect.29 Knowledge-based errors can manifest the same way as rule-based errors, with delays in communicating changes in patient clinical status quickly and effectively or as inaccurate interpretations of patient information shared with other health-care team members. Communication Safety Alert
The human mind has inherent limitations in mental functioning. Being aware of your minds vulnerability to stress and time pressures as well as long hours and fatigue can help you recognize when you may be at risk for error.
Violations
Violations are deliberate deviations from standard practices, policies, and procedures.27 People purposely break rules when there are poor operating procedures, inadequate work environments, low morale, time pressures, and tools and equipment that cause frustration. Routine violations occur habitually in health care. They include behaviors such as cutting corners or bending the rules to get the job done on time. Routine violations continue to be committed in the absence of incidents and are tolerated by management.27 Health-care team members are creative and often respond to a system problem with a quick x, or break from standard procedure. The immediate problem is solved but the underlying problems are ignored and allowed to continue.30 In a recent study that examined human factors in a cardiovascular operating room, nurses stated that they were more prone to break the rules when they were rushed.31 Conditions that created a rushed work environment for the nurses included overbooking of the operating room with subsequent overtime hours and understafng. The nurses indicated that they would break the rules only when there was no perceived impact on patient outcome. Violations can set in gradually over time and become the accepted norm of work behavior. Violations can become so routine and so common as to be almost invisible to both workers and management, reective of the sh and water effect discussed in Chapter 3. In her investigation of the Challenger accident, in which moments after liftoff the space shuttle exploded, killing all seven astronauts, Diane Vaughan32 discovered how gradual
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departures from safety became accepted as normal. She referred to this organizational behavior as normalization of deviance. In the days preceding the Challenger launch, individuals tried, unsuccessfully, to bring attention to safety concerns about the mission. The concerns were dismissed as acceptable risk. Over time, normalization of deviance, when combined with other factors, creates thin margins of safety in an organization; in this case, it ultimately led to disaster.32
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systems factors known to inuence nursing performance in monitoring patients, coordinating care, maintaining continuity in care, and communicating effectively face to face, over the phone, and in writing with other health-care providers. There are three main areas in the concept map: 1. Performance Inputs, which guide the nursing work system 2. Process the required human performance to change inputs into outputs 3. Performance Outputs, the outcome of the inputs and process A full discussion of this concept map can be found at DavisPlus at http://davisplus. fadavis.com
Outcome
Performance Outputs Nurse Adequate access to information Adequate monitoring Adequate coordination Adequate continuity of care Correct Interpretations Sound clinical decision making Adequate sharing of accurate information Job satisfaction Patient Optimal health Freedom from harmful event Organization Quality care services
Do the interactions among components across the levels of the work system support human performance?
Human Abilities Physical Performance Seeing/Hearing/Writing Cognitive Performance Attending Perceiving Interpreting Active listening Active working memory Decision making Social-Behavioral Performance Morale Motivation
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The Nursing Work System concept map illustrates how system inputs can inuence nurses ability to perform their work activities and how that ability affects patient outcomes. Just as a well-functioning work system can facilitate performance, a poorly functioning work system can create the conditions that lead to human error, communication failures, and harmful events.39 Next is a discussion of how system factors create hazardous conditions that facilitate human errors, using James Reasons accident causation theory.
System levels
External environment Organizational management Work environment Nature of nursing work Individual
Harmful event
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Reason40 states that holes in the defenses arise for two reasons: active failure and latent conditions. Nearly all harmful events within the nursing work system involve a combination of active failures and latent conditions.
Active Failures
Active failures are the unsafe acts committed by nurses, physicians, and other healthcare providers.40 Unsafe acts are human errors, including attention slips, memory lapses, and honest mistakes, as well as intentional violations. Reason describes these individuals as being on the sharp end of occurrences, as their acts have an immediate effect on patient safety. Most often, health-care administrators look no further for the cause of the harmful event once they have identified the individual who committed the unsafe act. Virtually all such acts have a causal history that extends back in time and up through the levels of the system, however, and are most often attributable to latent conditions.
Latent Conditions
Latent conditions are the inevitable resident pathogens, or flaws, within the work system.40 They are present in all organizations. They stem from fallible decisions made by managers and top-level administrators, which give rise to poorly designed facilities, training gaps, staff shortages, heavy workload, and inadequate communication processes, policies, and procedures. Reason describes managers and top-level administrators at the blunt end of occurrences because they are removed in both space and time from the front line of direct, hands-on care delivery. Their influence is more indirect. Latent conditions create two kinds of weaknesses in system defenses. One such weakness is longstanding unworkable procedures or design deciencies in nursing work areas. As an example, the phone that nurses use to communicate with physicians is usually in the noisiest part of the care unit. Latent conditions can also create error-provoking conditions within the workplace that may lead to unsafe acts. Error-provoking conditions are characterized by time pressures, heavy workload, understafng, high cognitive demands, interruptions, long hours, inadequate training, and unavailability of essential information.40,41 Error-provoking conditions may overburden human limitations, causing active failure in nurses and an ultimate harmful event. Latent conditions, as the term suggests, may lie dormant for many years before they combine with active failures and local conditions to create an accident trajectory, as illustrated in Figure 12.2. In the diagram, the accident sequence is from left to right.27 The accident sequence begins with external environment pressures. Organizational management responds to the pressures and continues the sequence through the negative consequences of its decisions. An example is use of overtime to cope with a nursing shortage. The decisions are transmitted along departmental pathways to the work environment, where they create error-provoking conditions for unsafe acts. The error-provoking conditions overtax human abilities to perform the nursing activities adequately. The individual nurse commits an unsafe act, such as an attention slip, memory lapse, mistake during execution or decision making, or purposeful violation. A harmful event occurs.
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Central to Reasons accident causation model is that the mental antecedents of unsafe acts are, beyond a certain point, extremely difcult to control.27 Mental antecedents are what goes on in the mind of the health-care provider prior to the unsafe act. For example, the mental antecedents of distraction, momentary inattention, forgetting, losing the picture, preoccupation, and xation are entirely natural human behaviors within an environment that can be hectic, demanding, time-pressured, and inadequately staffed. Unlike active failures, whose specic forms are often hard to foresee, latent conditions can be identied and remedied before harmful events occur. Targeting latent conditions is a proactive strategy to prevent harmful events and is analogous to health promotion within the health-care system. Targeting latent conditions is more than simply treating the illnesses of health care by dealing with errors and harmful events as they occur; it involves determining and resolving the underlying cause for the patient care error and harmful event. The issue must be addressed from a broader perspective, with interventions directed toward changing the conditions in the health-care system that contribute to human error. Nurses who have the greatest frequency of patient contact are uniquely positioned to detect and correct health-care errors before they reach the patient. Nurses are often the last line of defense against health-care errors.42 Although nurses are the safety nets, they are also the most vulnerable front-line care provider. Nurses inherit the latent conditions created by everyone else who has played a role in the inadequate design of the health-care delivery system. Rather than being the main instigators of an error leading to patient harm, nurses tend to be inheritors of system defects. Their part is usually that of adding a nal garnish to a lethal brew whose ingredients have already been long in the cooking.40 Nurses and other health-care providers must be aware of the high-risk environment in which they work. A vital safety behavior in nurses is assertiveness in speaking up about latent conditions that put them and their patients at risk.
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Interruption-Driven Environment
Nurses and other health-care providers function within an interruption-driven work environment. Interruptions are latent system factors that have a marked effect on human performance, causing diversion of attention, stress, fatigue, forgetfulness, and error.53-55 Interruptions are dened as an uncontrollable and unpredictable stressor that results in information [overload] and cognitive fatigue. When interruptions cause an employee to leave tasks unnished, these tasks act as distracters and further effort is required to inhibit attention to them while processing new inputs.56
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A high frequency of interruptions can overburden a nurses working memory. This may cause nurses to forget to do something important, such as calling a physician about an abnormal blood result, which may result in delays in treatment and increase the potential for patient harm. Of great concern is that the nurse, whose attention is constantly shifting from one item to another during interruptions, may lose previously held information in working memory. Therefore, the nurse may not be able to formulate a complete and coherent clinical picture of the current state of her patients needs.20 Without a coherent clinical picture of the patient, critical thinking and clinical decision making will be affected. The potential for error is increased in an interruption-driven workplace. This in turn affects the accuracy of the patient clinical picture that is shared with other care providers. Clearly, some interruptions are necessary to call attention to urgent situations; however, there is greater risk for human error when interruptions are the norm for communication. Safer work environments can be achieved through education, raising awareness of the consequences of interruptions on human abilities and patient safety, and the development of new strategies and technologies that minimize the need to generate interruptions in the rst place.55
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with other health-care providers as they continually monitor patient health status, coordinate and implement patient care services, and maintain continuity of care during transfers from one provider to another or one setting to another. Nurses must be aware of the systems approach to managing errors in health-care settings. A systems approach views errors as the result of the consequences of organization system factors and emphasizes the importance of discovering how the system failed rather than focusing on the person making the error. This chapter presents an analysis of the nursing work system from a human factors science perspective. Within the nursing work system, the interactions between individual nurses, the nature of nursing work, the work environment, organizational management, and the external environment must support human performance abilities to produce optimal patient outcomes and quality care. Nurses must understand the nursing work system and how the work system design affects patient safety. Armed with this knowledge, nurses are able to anticipate and recognize mental antecedents of error within individuals and environmental conditions within systems, both of which result in patient harm.
BUILDING HIGH LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For an interactive version of this activity, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus. fadavis.com 1. Reection: Think about your initial reaction when you first read about the thousands of people who die every year in hospitals as a result of medical error. Have your thoughts changed about blaming individuals for errors? 2. Look up the words sentinel event and adverse event in the Patient-Safety Dictionary, located at http://rcpsc.medical.org/publications/patientsafety dictionary_e.pdf Watch the DVD on Delivering Patient-safety located on the homepage of the Canadian Patient-Safety Institute, located at www. patientsafetyinstitute.ca The video is approximately 9 minutes. Describe examples of communications between members of the health-care team to ensure the delivery of safe patient care.
References
1. Landrigan, C.P. The Handoff: A Critical Point of Vulnerability. CRICO/RM Forum March:6-7, 2007. 2. McCloskey, J., Bulechek, G. (eds.). Nursing Interventions Classication (NIC), 3rd ed. St Louis, Mosby: 2000. 3. Institute of Medicine. Page, A. (ed.). Keeping Patients Safe: Transforming the Work Environment of Nurses. Washington, D.C., National Academies Press: 2004. 4. Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. The Joint Commission Guide to Improving Staff Communication. Oakbrook Terrace, Ill., Joint Commissions Resources: 2005. 5. Clancy, C.M. Care Transitions: A Threat and an Opportunity for Patient Safety. American Journal of Medical Quality 1:415-417, 2006. 6. Hughes, R.G., Clancy, C.M. Improving the Complex Nature of Care Transitions. Journal of Nursing Care Quality 22:289-292, 2007. 7. Joint Commission. FAQs for the 2008 National Patient Safety Goals. Located at http://www.jointcommission.org/NR/rdonlyres/13234515-DD9A-4635-A718-D5E84A98AF13/0/2008_FAQs_NPSG_02.pdf Accessed January 2009.
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8. Institute of Medicine. To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System: A Report of the Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Washington, D.C., National Academies Press: 1999. Located at http://www.iom.edu/Object.File/Master/4/117/ToErr-8pager.pdf Accessed December 2008. 9. Leonard, M., Graham, S., Bonacum, D. The Human Factor: The Critical Importance of Effective Teamwork and Communication in Providing Safe Care. Quality and Safety in Health Care 13(S1):85-90, 2004. 10. Kohn, L.T., Corrigan, J.M., Donaldson, M.S. (eds.). To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System. Washington, D.C., National Academies Press, Institute of Medicine: 2000. 11. Frank, J.R., Brien, S. (eds.). The Safety Competencies: Enhancing Patient Safety Across the Health Professions. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Canadian Patient Safety Institute: 2008. Located at http://www.patientsafetyinstitute.ca/uploadedFiles/Safety_Competencies_16Sep08.pdf Accessed November 2008. 12. Bloomkatz, A. Goodness of Fit. Association of Psychological Science 18, 2005. Located at http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/getArticle.cfm?id=1826 Accessed January 2009. 13. Chapanis, A., Garner, W., Morgan, C. Applied Experimental Psychology: Human Factors in Engineering Design. N.Y., Wiley: 1985. 14. Henriksen, K., Dayton, E., Keyes, M.A., et al. Understanding Adverse Events: A Human Factors Framework. In Hughes, R.G. (ed.). Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses. Rockville, Md., Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: 2008. 15. Shappell, S.A., Wiegmann, D.A. The Human Factors Analysis and Classication System-HFACS. Springeld, Va., U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Aviation Administration: 2000. Located at http://www.nifc.gov/safety/reports/humanfactors_class&anly.pdf Accessed December 2008. 16. Feyer, A.M., Williamson, A.M. Human Factors in Accident Modeling. In Stellman, J.M. (ed). Encyclopedia of Occupational Health and Safety, 4th ed. Geneva, International Labour Organisation: 1998. 17. Chopra, V., Bovill, J.G., Spierdijk, J., et al. Reported Signicant Observations During Anaesthesia: A Prospective Analysis Over an 18-Month Period. British Journal of Anaesthesia 68:13-17, 1992. 18. Cooper, J.B., Newbower, R.S., Long, C.D., et al. Preventable Anesthesia Mishaps: A Study of Human Factors. Quality and Safety in Health Care 11:277-282, 2002. 19. Donaldson, M.S. An Overview of To Err is Human: Re-emphasizing the Message of Patient Safety. In Hughes, R.G. (ed.). Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses. Rockville, Md., Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: 2008. 20. Cook, R.I., Woods, D.D. Operating at the Sharp End: The Complexity of Human Error. In Bogner, M.S. (ed.). Human Errors in Medicine. Hillsdale, N.J., Erlbaum: 1994. 21. Reason, J. Human Error. N.Y., Cambridge University Press: 1990. 22. Leape, L.L. Error in Medicine. Journal of the American Medical Association 272:1851-1857, 1994. 23. Hollnagel, E. Cognitive Ergonomics: Its All in the Mind. Ergonomics 40:1170-1182, 1997. 24. Parliamentary Ofce of Science and Technology. Managing Human Error. Postnote; June:1-8, 2001. Located at http://www.parliament.uk/post/pn156.pdf Accessed December 2008. 25. Reason, J. Managing the Risks of Organizational Accidents. Burlington, Vt., Ashgate: 1997. 26. Reason, J. Understanding Adverse Events: Human Events. Quality and Safety in Health Care 4:80-89, 1995. 27. Reason, J. Safety in the Operating Theatre: Human Error and Organizational Failure. Quality and Safety in Health Care 14:56-60, 2005. 28. Bacon, F. In Anderson, F. (ed.). The New Organon. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill: 1960. 29. Koczmara, C., Jelincic, V., Dueck, C. 2005. Dangerous Abbreviations: U Can Make a Difference! CACCN 16:3, 12-15, 2005. Located at http://www.ismp-canada.org/download/CACCN-Fall05.pdf Accessed July 2008. 30. Tucker, A., Edmondson, A. Why Hospitals Dont Learn From Failures: Organizational and Psychological Dynamics That Inhibit System Change. California Management Review 45:55-72, 2003. 31. ElBardissi, A.W., Wiegmann, D.A., Dearani, J.A., et al. Application of the Human Factors Analysis and Classication System Methodology to the Cardiovascular Surgery Operating Room. Annals of Thoracic Surgery 83:1412-1419, 2007. 32. Vaughan, D. The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture, and Deviance at NASA. Chicago, Chicago University Press: 1996. 33. Karsh, B-T., Alper, S.J. 2005. Work Systems Analysis: The Key to Understanding Health Care Systems. Rockville, Md., Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: 2005. Located at http://www.ahrq.gov/ downloads/pub/advances/vol2/Karsh.pdf Accessed January 2009. 34. Carayon, P., Hundt, A.S., Karsh, B. et al. Work System Design for Patient Safety: The SEIPS Model. Quality and Safety in Health Care 15:50-58, 2006. 35. Karsh, B., Holden, R.J., Alper, S.J., et al. A Human Factors Engineering Paradigm to Support the Performance of the Health Care Professional. Quality and Safety in Health Care 15:59-65, 2006. 36. Rousseau, D.M., House, R.J. Meso Organizational Behavior: Avoiding Three Fundamental Biases. In Cooper, C.L., Rousseau, D.M. (eds.). Trends in Organizational Behavior, vol. 1. John Wiley & Sons: 1994.
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37. Vicente, K.J. What Does It Take: A Case Study. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Safety. 29:598-609, 2003. 38. Vincent, C., Taylor-Adams, S., Stanhope, N. Framework for Analyzing Risk and Safety in Clinical Medicine. BMJ 316:1154-1157, 1998. 39. Smith, M.J., Karsh, B., Carayon. P., et al. Controlling Occupational Safety and Health Hazards. In Quick, J.C., Tetrick, L.E. (eds.). Handbook of Occupational Health Psychology. Washington, D.C., American Psychological Association: 2003. 40. Reason, J. 2000. Human Error: Models and Management. BMJ; 320; 768-770. 41. Ebright, P., Patterson, E., Chalko, B., et al. Understanding the Complexity of Registered Nurse Work in Acute Care Settings. Journal of Nursing Administration 33:630-638, 2003. 42. Hennerman, E.A., Gawlinski, A. A Near-Miss Model for Describing the Nurses Role in the Recovery of Medical Errors. Journal of Professional Nursing 20:196-201, 2004. 43. Norrish, B., Rundall, T. Hospital Restructuring and the Work of Registered Nurses. Milbank Quarterly 79:55, 2001. 44. American Nurses Association. Nurse Fatigue. Located at http://www.nursingworld.org/MainMenuCategories/ThePracticeofProfessionalNursing/workplace/Workforce/NurseFatigue.aspx Accessed December 2008. 45. Rogers, A.D., Hwang, W.T., Scott, L.D., et al. The Working Hours of Hospital Staff Nurses and Patient Safety. Health Affairs 23:202-212, 2004. 46. Dawson, D. Reid, K. Fatigue, Alcohol and Performance Impairment. Nature 388:235, 1997. 47. Van-Griever, A., Meijman, T. The Impact of Abnormal Hours of Work on Various Modes of Information Processing: A Process Model on Human Costs of Performance. Ergonomics 30:1287-1299, 1987. 48. American Nurses Association. 2006 Position Statements: Assuring Patient Safety: Registered Nurses Responsibility in All Roles and Settings to Guard Against Working When Fatigued. Located at http://www.safestafngsaveslives.org/WhatisSafeStafng/MaketheCase/Fatigue.aspx Accessed January 2009. 49. College of Registered Nurses of Manitoba. 2004. Duty to Care. Located at http://cms.tngsecure.com/le_download.php?fFile_id=173 Accessed January 2009. 50. Sexton, J.B., Thomas, E.J., Helmreich, R.L. Error, Stress, and Teamwork in Medicine and Aviation: Cross-Sectional Surveys. BMJ 320:745-749, 2000. 51. Combs, A., Taylor, C. The Effect of the Perception of Mild Degrees of Threat on Performance. Journal of Abnormal Social Psychology 47:420-424, 1952. 52. Easterbrook, J.A. The Effect of Emotion on Cue Visualization and the Organization of Behavior. Psychological Review 66:183-201, 1959. 53. Edwards, M.B., Gronlund, S.D. Task Interruption and Its Effects on Memory. Memory 6:665-687, 1998. 54. Reitman, J.S. Without Surreptitious Rehearsal, Information in Short-Tem Memory Decays. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior 13:365-377, 1974. 55. Alvarez, G., Coiera, E. Interdisciplinary Communication: An Uncharted Source of Medical Error? Journal of Critical Care 21:236-242, 2006. 56. Kirmeyer, S. Coping With Competing Demands: Interruption and the Type A Pattern. Journal of Applied Psychology 73:621-629, 1988. 57. Potter, P., Wolf, L., Boxerman, S., et al. An Analysis of Nurses Cognitive Work: A New Perspective for Understanding Medical Errors. In Henrikson, K., Battles, JB., Marks, E.S., et al. (eds.). Advances in Patient Safety: From Research to Implementation, vol. 1. Rockville, Md., Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: 2005.
CHAPTER
13
Key Terms
Group process SBAR High-reliability organizations Culture of safety Handoff Medication reconciliation Tall man lettering Readback/Hearback Do Not Use list Single-digit form Concept Map Care Plan Brief Huddle Debrief DESC CUS Two-challenge rule
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his chapter is focused on patient-safe strategies used by health-care team members as they work in groups to promote group collaboration to attain positive transformational outcomes within a culture of patient safety. The strategies promoting high-level communication processes to maintain collaborative working relationships for coordination of activities include brief, huddle, debrief, two-challenge rule, CUS, and DESC. Other patient-safe strategies discussed are those aimed at specic error-prone, high-risk communication situations that are well known to have led to patient harmful events in the health-care industry: patient handoff, readback/hearback, SBAR, Do Not Use list, medication reconciliation, single-digit form, and tall man lettering. Locate these strategies in the patient-safe strategies ring of the transformational model in Chapter 2. These strategies have been adapted from nonhealth-care high-risk industries. High-risk industries that have sustained excellent records of success in maintaining safety and prevention of harmful events are called high-reliability organizations.1 High-reliability nonhealth-care organizations are decades ahead of health-care organizations in building safety into their systems. Such organizations have learned from their own signicant disasters, including those such as the Challenger launch decision,2 airplane crashes,3 the poison gas release at Bhopal, India,4 and the nuclear reactor explosion at Chernobyl, Russia.5 Major accidents like these affected the lives of many people. In comparison, accidents in health care typically involve one patient at a time and seem less dramatic.6 Rarely do patient harmful events reach the headlines and public attention. Without the same impetus to improve safety that has been experienced by other industries, health care is the most poorly managed of all the high-risk industries and very late in coming to recognize the importance of system factors that underlie harmful events.7 This chapter begins with a comparison of health-care and other high-risk industries in developing a culture of safety. This leads to discussions of health-care team group communication principles and related patient-safe communication to promote group collaboration and synchronization. This chapter concludes with specic high-risk error-prone situations and the required patient-safe communication strategies to avoid harm to patients.
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mistakes. Above all, a just culture does not hold professionals accountable for system failings over which they have no control. Nevertheless, a just culture does not tolerate conscious disregard of clear risks to patients or gross misconduct.12 A signicant challenge for health-care organizations adopting the systems approach is to part with the traditional personal approach to errors that blames, names, shames, and retrains individuals who commit errors. This tradition stems from the traditional beliefs that individuals control their own destiny and are capable of choosing between right and wrong and that bad people make errors.13 High standards of performance are desirable in nurses, physicians, and other healthcare providers, but such standards can become a serious problem when they create an expectation of perfection. Because nurses and physicians regard perfection as a professional standard, they feel shame when they make an error,14 which creates pressure to hide or cover up errors.15 As a result, rather than professionals and organizations openly discussing and learning from errors and system failures, errors are unreported. Without a detailed analysis of incidents and near misses, organizations have no way of uncovering recurrent system failures.16 Systems that rely on perfection in human performance will result in failure. As spoken by Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical Officer of the United Kingdom at the launch of the World Alliance for Patient Safety, To err is human, to cover up is unforgivable, and to fail to learn is inexcusable.17 Although the health-care industry is similar to high-risk industries, it functions under even greater complexity.18 High-risk nonhealth care industries operate with technicalintensive systems in which people interact with computer-automated processes. In comparison, health care is a person-intensive system largely composed of processes conducted by groups of people, not by computers. Members of health-care teams function as specialized groups using group processes to deliver health care to patients who have different and often unpredictable responses to care. The development of curriculum and instructional ancillary materials to improve collaborative group processes is essential in making health care safer for all patients. Patient safety experts agree that communication is essential for the provision of quality health care and the prevention and correction of human errors leading to patient injury and harm.19 Currently, most health-care curricula lack teamwork principles and practices that are essential to achieving high reliability in health-care organization, even when evidence suggests that failures in teamwork and communication underlie most sentinel events.19 Standardized processes to create a shared model of patients situations are essential. One type of model is the Concept Map Care plan.20 Currently used in nursing education, the concept care map is developed from a multidisciplinary perspective and allows team members to visualize the interrelationships between medical diagnoses, nursing diagnoses, assessment data, and treatments. This holistic perspective gives team members a clear picture of the patients clinical situation, including the relationships between medical and nursing care problems, with integration of pathology, medications, treatments, and laboratory and diagnostic testing.20 Errors are more likely to be detected before harm occurs. In the health-care system, there are too few standards and safe practices focused on interdisciplinary patient-safe communication strategies. Communication variations go unchecked because expected behaviors have not been adequately established. Lack of
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adequate standards in patient-safe communication is the epidemic that plagues patient safety from a systems perspective. All too frequently, communication is situation- or personality-dependent and left open to chance. Accepted ambiguity in communication as a result of poorly defined communication expectations leads to inadvertent patient harm.21
BOX 13.1 Strategies for Effective Communication and Collaboration in Health Care Teams23 Be respectful and professional. Listen actively. Try to understand the other persons viewpoint. Model an attitude of collaboration, and expect it. Identify the bottom line. Decide what is negotiable and non-negotiable in patient care management; for example, patient safety is not negotiable; when staff members take a break is negotiable. Acknowledge the other persons thoughts and feelings. Pay attention to your own ideas and what you have to offer the group. Be cooperative. Be direct. Identify common, shared goals and concerns. State your feelings using I statements. Do not take things personally. Learn to say I was wrong and You could be right. Do not feel pressure to agree instantly. Think about all possible solutions before a meeting, and be willing to adapt if a more creative alternative is presented. Recognize that negotiation and resolution of conict takes time and may require several interactions.
All team members must understand group processes and the stages of small group development.24-26 Group process refers to an understanding of the behavior of people in groups trying to solve problems and make decisions. Health-care providers must be able to apply knowledge of group processes to health-care team processes. Stages of classic group process have been described in the classic work of Tuckman and Jensen24,25 and include the stages of forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning, as shown in Box 13.2.
Chapter 13 Collaborative Patient-Safe Communication Strategies BOX 13.2 Stages of Group Process Applied to Health-Care Teams
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Forming: Relationship development: team orientation, identication of role expectations, beginning team interactions, explorations, and boundary setting. Storming: Interpersonal interaction and reaction: dealing with tension, conict, and confrontation. Norming: Effective cooperation and collaboration: personal opinions are expressed and resolution of conict with formation of solidied goals and increased group cohesiveness. Performing: Group maturity and stable relationships: team roles become more functional and exible, structural issues are resolved leading to supportive task performance through group-directed collaboration and resource sharing. Adjourning: Termination and consolidation: team goals were met, closure occurs after evaluation, and review of outcomes.
Nursing students must also become aware how group member status and power affect communication processes of groups. Status is the measure of worth conferred on an individual by a group and profoundly affects group processes.27
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Promotion and facilitation of teamwork by the nursing team leader can be accomplished through the following patient-safe strategies that are standardized processes from high-reliability organizations and have been adapted to health-care teams to minimize patient care errors: Brief A brief is a short planning session prior to the start of team activities to discuss team formation, assign roles, establish expectations, and anticipate outcomes. Briefs clarify who will be leading the team so others know where to look for guidance, and open lines of communication to ensure that members can contribute their unique knowledge to the tasks to be accomplished. Protocols, responsibilities, and expected behaviors are discussed and reinforced so that misunderstandings are avoided and disruptive or unexpected behaviors are potentially avoided. Huddle A huddle is a problem-solving session to establish situation awareness so that all team members know updates in the current situation, are aware of what is going on around them, and share the same mental model. The team assesses the need to adjust the initial plans. Debrief The debrief is a means to improve group processes through an informal information session to review team performance after completion of activities. It addresses what went well and what should change or improve. There is a recap of the key events that occurred and lessons learned, and goals are set for improvement. One of the most important functions of the group team leader is conict resolution. The standard conict resolution processes from high-reliability organizations are outlined as follows: Resolving Conict Through Feedback Team members must advocate for the patient and assertively state corrective actions in a rm and respectful manner by stating the concern, offering a solution, and obtaining agreement. I am concerned about the drop in your patients blood pressure. How should we address this? If this is ignored, use the two-challenge rule. Two-Challenge Rule Assertively voice your concern at least two times to ensure it was heard, and the team member being challenged must acknowledge the feedback. If you still believe patient or staff safety may be compromised after discussion with the team member, then take additional action by contacting a supervisor, and communicate the situation to the entire team. If you are challenged, you must acknowledge the concerns. Every team member needs to be empowered to stop safety breaches. CUS This is a technique to provide a framework for conict resolution using signal words for patient safety. First state your concern, I am concerned about [complete]. Then state why you are uncomfortable: I am uncomfortable because [complete]. Then state why this is a safety issue: This is a safety issue because [complete].
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DESC A team leader uses DESC when a conict becomes personal in nature and team members become hostile toward one another, affecting their performance and safe patient care. The team leader sits down with the conicting parties, who describe the specic situation or behavior, providing concrete data; express how the situation makes them feel/what the concerns are; suggest other alternatives and seek agreement; and state the consequences of the behaviors in terms of impact on established team goals. The conicting parties should strive for consensus. When using DESC, the team leader works on a win-win outcome despite the interpersonal conict, stressing that team unity and quality of care are dependent on coming to an agreement all parties can accept. In the last section of this book, we examine specic patient-safe communication strategies that facilitate effective communications between members of the health-care team that have been adopted from high-reliability organizations. These patient-safe strategies have been designed to overcome health-care system weaknesses that have resulted in patient care errors, and they support the national patient safety goal of improving communication among health-care providers in the United States and Canada.
The handoff includes communication methods between the health-care providers such as verbal, written, or simultaneous verbal and written channels and is dependent on the
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health-care providers communication competency, level of stress, fatigue, or overload. It is performed in a work environment with time pressures and interruptions and is inuenced by existing communication norms and organizational culture. The handoff is a complex process. It must provide accurate essential information, including the patients current status, recent changes in condition or treatment, anticipated changes in condition or treatment to watch for, and plans that may be considered to address anticipated events.34 The handoff creates an accurate mental model of the patient situation, bringing attention to care that is in progress as well as contingency planning for the next interval of care. A nursing study demonstrated that simply listing historical events is not as effective in conveying mental models of the situation as is describing problems, hypotheses, and predictive assessment of the situation.35 Communications between health-care providers during handoff allow the individual accepting responsibility for the patient to ask questions to clarify and verify the details and to conrm understanding so that differences in mental models can be exposed.36 The handoff provides opportunity for the individual who is accepting responsibility of the patient to bring a fresh perspective to the patient situation. A fresh perspective can detect xation errors caused by fatigued decision making.37,38 Recall from Chapter 12 that xation means that a health-care provider sees only the information that conrms personal expectations rather than seeing the information that is actually present and that might contradict what is expected. Questions such as, Do you know that for sure? or Did you try this? detect xation errors. Handoff is an integral communication process between healthcare providers that promotes effective critical thinking and decision making, maintains continuity of care, and promotes patient safety. The result of inadequate handoffs is that safety often fails,39 resulting in, for example, wrong-site surgery,40 medications errors,41 mismanagement of critical results,42 and patient deaths.42,43 Multiple and recurring handoffs in serial fashion may result in the potential for a progressive loss of information if certain information is missed, forgotten, or otherwise not conveyed.44,45 As a result, while the demand for accurate and timely information has increased, the likelihood that this same information is fragmented across care providers has also increased. This apparent paradox jeopardizes patient safety.44 In high-reliability organizations, standardized handoff procedures are practiced hundreds of times to ensure that no information is lost during the transfer of information.46 But in health care, this is not the case. In one study, only 8% of medical schools taught students how to hand off patients in a formal process.47 Nursing programs may include communication theory, but they do not teach the specic handoff process.48 Instead, handoffs have been taught by preceptors, with medical and nursing students watching how they have given and received handoffs. Each preceptor may hand off differently, leaving students unsure of best practice.45 Despite being noted as the most vulnerable point in communication, there is surprisingly little in the literature that suggests characteristics of a good handoff and what form it should take (written, verbal, or both) to be most effective. Because nurses hand off information about patients so often, they may not realize handoff communication is a highrisk process.49 Nurses have described high variability in the level of information given during change of shift handoff reports.50,51 Handoff that occurs at the beginning of a shift has
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always been an important part of the communication process in nursing, providing focus and direction to nurses beginning their shift, and helping to maintain continuity of care. The quality of handoff inuences directly the delivery of care for the shift that follows.52 Several studies demonstrate that the actual content of the information handed over is inconsistent, with insufcient and nonspecic detail. Information is often subjective and includes jargon, abbreviations, and poor descriptors, including ne or OK. Often the only consistency is giving the patients name, age, resuscitation status, diagnosis, and treatment, reecting more of a medical model with little reference to nursing care.53-55 Sherlock54 found that the only time the verbal report was more detailed was when the patients condition was critical rather than stable. The content of handoff lacked standardization, and the quality of the information was dependent on the person giving the report. As a result, essential care was not communicated consistently. These studies demonstrate the need for improvement, organization, and standardization in the quality of patient information presented at handoff. Patterson46 examined the handoff communication strategy used in high-reliability organizations including NASA, Canadian nuclear power plants, a U.S. railroad dispatch center, and an ambulance dispatch center in Toronto, Canada. The handoff characteristics that these high-reliability organizations all shared included: Face-to-face verbal update with interactive questioning Topics initiated by the person assuming responsibility as well as the person being replaced Repeating back by the incoming person to ensure information was accurately interpreted Information presented in the same order every time Limited interruptions Written summary of activities that occurred during the shift Following the guidelines established by high-reliability organizations, the World Health Organization Collaborating Center and other leading organizations have developed health-care handoff recommendations. The guidelines reect the communication process in the transformational model with focus on the creation of common meaning and also include creation of a shared mental model of the patient situation. The recommendations are as follows47,56,57: Use clear and common language; avoid jargon, ambiguous words, or confusing terms that are open to misinterpretation. Limit interruptions during handoff communications. Focus on the information being exchanged; avoid distractions, such as mixing a medication or trying to chart at the same time as listening to anothers handoff. Allocate sufcient time for handoff. Encourage interactive questioning, allowing opportunity to verify and clarify information. At minimum, include diagnosis, allergies, current condition, recent changes in condition, ongoing treatment, and possible changes or complications that might occur and what the plan of action should be if complications do occur in the next time interval. Medication Reconciliation at Handoff A key consideration during handoff is the reliability of medication information. Medication regimes must be carefully communicated between health-care providers: 46%
186
of medication errors occur when new orders are written at patient admission and discharge.58 The World Health Organization Collaborating Center has recommended a verification process of medication reconciliation to prevent medication errors at care transition points59: Write a complete and accurate list of all medications the patient is taking at home. Compare the list against the admission, transfer, and discharge orders, and bring discrepancies to the attention of the prescribing physician. Keep the list updated. Communicate the list to the next provider of care whenever the patient is transferred from one care unit to another and when the patient is discharged home. Keep the list in a visible location on the patients chart.
187
Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation
NASA and commercial aviation have shown that the adoption of standardized communication tools and behaviors is a very effective strategy in reducing risk of harmful events.46 This is particularly true when there is a power or authority gradient between two communicators. For example, in health care, a physician is considered at the top of the hierarchy and has more authority than a nurse. Physicians often do not receive critical information because nurses may be unable to speak in a clear and assertive way and overcome the authority gradient. One such tool that standardizes behavior between
188
physicians and nurse is the situation, background, assessment, and recommendation (SBAR) instrument. The SBAR tool for communication includes21,69: SSituation. Describe the problem in a simple sentence. What is going on with the patient? BBackground. What is the clinical background or context? Anticipate the listeners questions about the situation, and provide the answers. AAssessment. Summarize your observations about the situation. What do you think the problem is? RRecommendation. Provide a specic recommendation for problem solving. The use of such a tool forces both the sender and receiver to move through a discussion in a predictable, logical ow that is not dependent on personality, status or hierarchy, sex, ethnic background,70 or differences in communication styles between nurses and physicians.71 It allows health-care providers with differing communication styles to speak the same language. It does not leave communication open to chance. Briefly and concisely, critically important pieces of information have been transmitted in a predictable structure. Not only is there familiarity in how health-care providers communicate, but the SBAR develops critical thinking skills as the person initiating the conversation knows to indicate the problem, provide an assessment, and indicate appropriate treatments.21 CHAPTER SUMMARY High-risk industries have high potential for errors with disastrous consequences. Health-care organizations are high-risk industries that have lagged behind other high-risk industries in adopting a systems approach because health-care errors have not received the same attention as public disasters that have occurred in other industries. Since 2000, when the initial Institute of Medicine report on errors in health care was published, and health-care providers became fully aware of the magnitude of patient-care errors, there has been an impetus in healthcare organizations to promote a culture of patient safety and build a safer health-care system. A culture of patient safety and building safety into a health-care system depends on communication that facilitates collaboration between members of the health-care team. Communication failures are the leading safety hazard in health care and result in a lack of collaboration between members of the interdisciplinary health-care team.
BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL COMMUNICATION COMPETENCE For additional exercises, see DavisPlus at http://davisplus.fadavis.com 1. Reection. Think about the team leaders with whom you have worked during your clinical rotations. What skills do they exhibit? How do they exhibit them? 2. Practice. Work with a colleague, and practice readback/hearback and the SBAR. 3. Critical Thinking. How do communication standards and structured communications improve patient safety?
189
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Index
A
Abbreviations patient-safe alternatives to, 186 Acceptance as psychosocial stage of illness, 98 Accident causation theory nursing work system and, 168170 Accuracy in patient health information sharing, 67 Acknowledgment in conrming messages, 95 Active failures dened, 169 Active listening, 5257 barriers to, 5354 choices in, 5657 components of, 5556 dened, 52 Active participation in patient education, 148, 149b Activity limitations patient education and, 147 Addressing patients culture-based attitudes toward, 6465 Adolescence losses in, 134 Adulthood losses in, 134135, 135b Adversative approach gender and, 69 Adverse event dened, 4 Adversity management as nursing skill, 70 Affective dispositions in patient education, 145, 152153 Afrmations as self-esteem improvement strategy, 42t Alzheimers disease patient-safe communication in, 85 Ambiguous messages avoidance of, 4748 Analytical statements in active listening, 56 Anger crying in response to, 136, 138139 in response to illness, 9899 Anticipatory grief dened, 132 Apologizing as conversational ritual, 72 Appearance in professional identity management, 8990 Appropriateness in high-level communication competency, 13, 13f humor and, 121122, 122b, 128 in nursing touch, 108109, 109b, 115 Assertiveness in stress management, 88 Assign meaning in transformational communication model, 17f, 18t, 2223 Assumptions perception and, 34 Attending in listening, 52 Attitude in self-concept, 36 Attribution perception and, 3334 Auditory impairment patient education and, 149b patient-safe communication in, 85 Automatic mode in normal cognition theory, 163 Avoidance tactic humor as, 125 Behavior nonverbal, 21. See also Nonverbal behavior perception and, 33, 33f Being orientation culture-based attitudes toward, 64 Belief in self-concept, 36 Biased memory dened, 165 Biological communication context dened, 24 Biological gender differences, 6768 Blamer in stress response, 87 Body language in nursing, 73 Brain processing as listening barrier, 53 Brief in health-care team communication, 182
C
Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation patient safety goals of, 78 Care transitions nursing role in, 161 patient-safe strategies for, 183186 Caring touch intent and inhibition of, 109110 Change culture-based attitudes toward, 6263 Channel in common meaning creation, 5152 in early communication models, 14f16f, 1415 in transformational communication model, 17f, 18t, 2122 Children importance of touch in, 107108 losses in, 133134 patient education in, 151
B
Back massage in nursing touch, 115 Bad news culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Balance speaker-listener, 7071 Basic human needs touch as, 107108
194
Index
development of, 9496 effect of illness on, 9699 patient safety risk factors and, 93103 positive versus negative, 9496 transformation to positive, 99100 Communication risk factors ambiguity as, 4748 harmful events and, 4 in listening, 5354 low self-esteem as, 41 personal message interpretations as, 4647 in transformational communication model, 17, 17f, 19t, 25, 25t Communicators personal needs of, 1920 in transactional communication model, 15, 16f in transformational communication model, 17f, 1718, 18t19t, 1920 perceptions in, 2943, 30f, 32f33f, 39f, 41f Competition culture-based attitudes toward, 64 gender and, 69 Concept map of nursing work system, 166167, 167f Concept map care plan in health-care team communication, 179 Condentiality culture-based attitudes toward, 63 Conrmation bias in patient care errors, 165 Conrming messages communication climate and, 9495 Conict management gender and, 69 in health-care team communication, 182 as nursing skill, 70 Connotative meaning dened, 46 Conscious mode in normal cognition theory, 163 Context in patient-safe communication, 84, 85b in transactional communication model, 15, 16f in transformational communication model, 17, 17f, 19t, 2425 types of, 24 Continuity of care in communication of patient information, 161 Convalescence as psychosocial stage of illness, 98 Conversational rituals gender and, 7273 in nursing, 73 Coordination of care in communication of patient information, 160161 Coping mechanism humor as, 124125, 127 Critical thought processing in transformational communication model, 17f, 18t, 20 Crying benets of, 132b as expression of grief and loss, 132 gender and, 137 inappropriate responses to, 139140, 140b in nurses, 140141, 141b patient-safe responses to, 137139, 138b reasons for, 136137 Cultural assessment, 66, 66b Cultural communication context dened, 24 Cultural competence aids to, 66b components of, 62 cultural nursing assessment in, 66, 66b Cultural sensitivity self-awareness and, 62 Cultural values North American versus traditional, 6265 Culture, 6166 as barrier to learning, 151 communication styles and, 70 gender and, 67
Clarity in language use, 47 Classication of stimuli in perception process, 32 Clinical decision making from health-care providershared information, 67 from patient-provided information, 56 Closure harmful event risk and, 32f in perception process, 32, 32f Clothing nonverbal behavior and, 5051 Cognitive impairment patient-safe communication in, 85 Cognitive knowledge in patient education, 145, 152153 Collaborative patient-safe communication, 177188 high-reliability strategies in, 183188 organizational culture of safety in, 178183, 180b181b Comfort zones in patient interactions, 51, 51b Comforting touch, 109 Common meaning creation for transformational outcomes, 4557 choice of communication channel in, 5152 listening in, 5257. See also Listening nonverbal behavior in, 48, 49t, 5051 verbal language in, 4648 Communication complexity of, 12 culture and, 6166, 66b early models of, 14f16f, 1416 gender differences in, 6669, 67b68b health-care team, 157188 interpersonal, 174 nurse-patient, 77155 transformational model of, 1626, 2943. See also Transformational model of communication Communication climate dened, 94
Index
personal space and, 113 in self-concept development, 37 touch and, 106 Culture of safety dened, 178 organizational, 178183, 180b181b CUS technique in health-care team communication, 182 Dress in professional identity management, 8990 Dying patients grief facilitation for families of, 139
195
E
Effectiveness in high-level communication competency, 1213, 13f Effects in transformational communication model, 17, 17f, 18t, 23 Efciency culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Elderly patients losses in, 135 E-mail as communication channel, 22 Emotional expression in communication climate transformation, 99, 99b crying in, 132, 132b, 136141, 138b, 140b humor in, 124, 127 nonverbal behavior in, 49t touch in, 109111 Emotional risk factors patient safety, 94 Emotions as barriers to learning, 151 communication climate and, 97103, 99b101b management of nurses, 100b101b, 100103 in response to illness, 9799, 99b in response to loss, 132133 in stress response, 85b, 8687 Empathy in active listening, 5556 in conrming messages, 95 in response to crying, 138b, 138139 sympathy versus, 99100, 100b Encouraging touch, 109 Environment desire for control over, 6265 patient education and, 146 Equality culture-based attitudes toward, 63
D
Debrief in health-care team communication, 182 Decision making error of, 164165 information relevant to, 57 Defense mechanisms as barriers to learning, 151 Defensiveness after personal attack, 102 Dementia patient-safe communication in, 85 Denotative meaning dened, 46 Dependency in response to illness, 9899 Depression humor and, 126127 in response to grief and loss, 133 DESC technique in health-care team communication, 183 Diet patient education and, 147 Directness culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Disclosure types of, 3940, 41f Disconrming messages communication climate and, 9496 Distractor in stress response, 8788 Do Not Use list in patient safety, 186 Documentation of health record, 186 of patient education, 154 Dosage errors strategies to reduce, 186
Errors causes and types of, 162166, 165b Ethnicity beliefs and values and, 6266, 66b Evaluative statements in active listening, 56 Exercise guidelines patient education and, 147 Expectations perception and, 34 Eye contact in nonverbal behavior, 50
F
Face in professional identity management, 89 Face saving in high-level communication competency, 13, 13f Facial expressions in nonverbal behavior, 50 Family support systems patient education and, 150 Fear crying in response to, 136 Feedback in early communication models, 15, 15f16f in health-care team communication, 182 in patient education, 150151 in patient-safe communication, 7 as self-esteem improvement strategy, 42t in transformational communication model, 17, 17f, 19t, 23 Fields of experience in interactional communication model, 15, 15f Fight-or-ight stress reaction, 86 First impressions perception and, 34 Fish-and-water effect dened, 38 Forms of address culture-based attitudes toward, 6465 Fundamental attribution error dened, 34
196 G
Index
member status in, 181b, 181183 patient safety risk factors and, 159173 patient-safe decision making based on, 67 standards for, 180b, 180181 Hearing impairments in, 53 in listening, 52 High-level communication competency in common meaning creation, 4557. See also Common meaning creation components of, 1213, 13f, 80 in nurse-patient relationship, 8085, 81b, 81f, 82b, 83f, 84b in patient-safe communication, 8085, 81b, 81f, 82b, 83f, 84b perception and, 3134, 32f33f touch in, 106115, 107b, 109b, 112b114b High-reliability organizations safety and, 178 High-reliability patient-safe communication, 183188 during handoff, 183186 Honesty culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Hugging in nursing touch, 113114, 114b Human error causes and types of, 162166, 165b Human factors science goodness of t in, 162 Humor, 119128 appropriateness of, 121122, 122b, 128 example of, 83 gender and, 7273 nontherapeutic, 121122, 122b nurses use of, 126127 patients use of, 123125 physiological effects of, 122123 psychological effects of, 123 therapeutic, 120 Idealism culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Illness gender and, 73 impact on growth and development of, 135136 as threat to self-esteem, 9699 Inappropriate humor, 121122, 122b Individualism culture-based attitudes toward, 63 in response to illness, 98 Infants importance of touch in, 107108 Informality culture-based attitudes toward, 6465 Information interpretation in patient-safe communication, 5 Information overload as listening barrier, 53 Inpatient referrals patient education and, 147 Instant messaging as communication channel, 22 Institute of Medicine patient safety guidelines of, 161162 Interactional model of communication, 1415, 15f Interpersonal communication, 174 communicator perceptions in, 30 creation of common meaning in, 4557, 49t, 50b51b culture and gender in, 6174, 66b68b dened, 1314 disclosure in, 3940, 40f early models of, 1317, 14f16f patient safety and, 38 transformational model in, 1626, 17f, 18t19t, 20b, 24b, 25t communicator perceptions in, 2943, 31f33f Interpersonal relationship dened, 14 Interpretation in perception process, 33
Gender, 6669 biological inuences on, 6768 changing views on, 67 communication tailored to, 67b crying and, 137 culture and, 67 humor and, 125 nonverbal behavior and, 73 responses to discomfort and, 73 speech styles and, 68b, 6873 Gender context dened, 24 Gestures in nonverbal behavior, 50 Giving hope humor and, 126127 Goals of patient education, 152 patient-safe communication and, 8284, 83f, 84b Grief, 131141 crying in response to, 136141, 138b, 140b dened, 132 duration of, 133b inappropriate response to, 139140, 140b patient-safe response to, 137139, 138b stages of, 98 support during, 133 Group process stages of, 180, 181b
H
Handoff continuity of care during, 161 patient-safe strategies for, 183186 Harmful events in accident causation theory, 168f, 168170 denitions and terms in, 4 risk of, 32f Health literacy nurse educator in, 145 in patient education, 144147 programs for improving, 144 Health records documentation of, 186 Health-care team communication, 157188 collaborative strategies in, 177188
I
I statements in owning emotions, 102
Index
Interruptions gender and, 7071 overlapping versus, 70 as patient safety risk factor, 171172 Intimate zone of personal space, 51, 112 in patient-safe communication strategies, 5457 process of, 52 in response to crying, 138b, 138139 risk factors in, 5354 Look-alike/sound-alike medications patient safety and, 187 Loss crying in response to, 136137 grief and, 132133 life stages and, 133136, 135b Low self-esteem as communication barrier, 41
197
J
Johari window self-awareness and, 3839, 39f Joint Commission patient safety goals of, 78 Joking as conversational ritual, 7273 Judging perception and, 34
M
Manners in professional identity management, 89 Massage in nursing touch, 115 in premature infants, 108 Materialism culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Meaning assignment in transformational communication model, 17f, 18t, 2223 Medical errors communication-related, 4 medication-related, 186188 person versus systems approach to, 161162 superimposing and, 32f Medications patient education and, 146 reconciliation during handoff of, 185186 Memory failure errors from, 164 Mental model in normal cognition theory, 163 Message in common meaning creation conveying of, 4648, 49t, 5052 receiving of, 5257 communication climate and, 9496 conrming, 9495 disconrming, 9496 in interactional communication model, 1415, 15f
K
Knowledge-based errors, 165
in linear communication model, 14, 14f in transactional communication model, 1516, 16f in transformational communication model, 17, 17f, 18t, 21 METHOD acronym in patient education, 145147 Middle age losses in, 134135 Minimizing as listening barrier, 54 Mistakes categories of, 164165 Mixed mode in normal cognition theory, 163164 Motivation to perceive others, 33, 33f Mourning, 131141. See also Grief
L
Language in common meaning creation, 4648 gender and, 68b, 6869, 7173 Lapses dened, 164 Late adulthood losses in, 135 Latent conditions as patient safety risk factors, 169172 Laughter, 119128. See also Humor Learned responses in self-concept, 36 Learner assessment in patient education, 147150, 148b149b, 152 Learning factors that inhibit, 151 principles of teaching and, 147151, 148b149b Life stages losses in, 133136, 135b Linear model of communication, 14, 14f Listening active, 5257 in common meaning creation, 5257 gender and, 7071
N
National Education Association on touch, 106 Negativity perception and, 34 self-esteem and, 42t Nervousness as communication barrier, 101, 101b touching patients and, 107 Noise in early communication models, 14, 14f16f, 16 Nontherapeutic humor inappropriateness of, 121122, 122b Nonverbal behavior in common meaning creation, 48, 5051 communication through, 21, 48 functions of, 49t gender and, 73 in managing emotions, 101 nursing assessment of, 50b Norm of reciprocity dened, 39 Normal cognition theory modes in, 163164 North American values traditional values versus, 6265
198
Index
patient safety communication risk factors in, 159173, 165b, 168f teaching plan in, 152155, 154b teaching-learning principles in, 147151, 148b149b Patient identication in patient-safe communication, 5 Patient monitoring in communication of patient information, 160 Patient safety communication connection with, 38 evidence-based strategies for, 8 high-reliability strategies for, 183188 initiatives to improve, 78 organizational culture and, 178183, 180b181b risk factors for. See Patient safety risk factors transformational communication model in, 1626, 17f, 18t19t, 20b, 24b, 25t Patient safety risk factors categories of, 94 closure and, 32f communication climate and, 93103 health-care team communication and, 159173 in nursing work systems, 159173, 165b, 167f168f superimposing and, 32f Patient turnover as patient safety risk factor, 170 Patient viewpoint humor and, 121125, 122b in patient-safe communication, 84, 85b Patient-provided health information decision making based on, 56 Patient-safe communication, 8085 communication climate and, 93103, 99b101b disclosure in, 40, 41f empathy in, 99100, 100b for families of dying patients, 139 high-reliability strategies for, 183188 humor in, 119128 nurse-patient relationship and, 45, 8085, 81b, 81f, 82b, 83f, 84b
Nurse leadership in health-care team communication, 181b, 181183 Nurse-patient communication, 77155 communication climate and, 93103, 99b101b fundamentals of, 7991, 80b82b, 81f, 83f, 84b86b grief and loss and, 131141, 132b133b, 135b, 138b, 140b141b humor in, 119128, 122b managing nurses emotions in, 100b101b, 100103 other communication versus, 82 in patient education, 143155, 148b149b, 154b patient safety risk factors and, 93103, 99b101b patient-related barriers to, 7 patient-safe communication in, 47, 8085, 81b, 81f, 82b, 83f, 84b touch in, 105115, 109b, 112b114b Nurse-patient relationships, 7991. See also Nurse-patient communication cognitive and sensory impairments and, 85 disclosure in, 40, 41f empathy versus sympathy in, 99100, 100b humor in, 121 patient-safe communication in, 8085, 81b, 81f, 82b, 83f, 84b phases of, 80, 80b professional identity management in, 90 stress and stress responses in, 85b86b, 8589 Nurse-physician communication readback/hearback in, 187 SBAR tool in, 187188 Nursing assessment cultural, 66, 66b of needs in vulnerable populations, 20b of nonverbal behavior, 50b Nursing work systems. See also Health-care team communication organizational structure of, 166168, 167f
O
Objectives of patient education, 152 patient-safe communication and, 8284, 83f, 84 Organization of nursing work system, 166168, 167f in perception process, 3132, 33f Organizational culture of safety, 178183 challenges in health care of, 179 dened, 178 standard setting in, 179180 team communication in, 180b, 180181 team member status in, 181b, 181183 Orientation phase in nursE-patient relationship, 80b Outcomes creation transformational communication model in, 1626, 17f, 18t19t, 20b, 24b, 25t common meaning in, 4557, 49t, 50b51b Outpatient referrals patient education and, 147 Overtime as patient safety risk factor, 170
P
Pain crying in response to, 136 Paralanguage in nonverbal behavior, 50 Patient advocacy as nursing skill, 70 Patient care errors. See also Medical errors person versus systems approach to, 161162 Patient education, 143155 basic information in, 145147 factors that inhibit, 151 humor in, 127 in patient-safe communication, 5 prerequisites for, 145
Index
overview of process in, 81f perception checking in, 3435 in response to crying, 137139, 138b storytelling in, 71 touch in, 107b, 107115, 109b, 112b114b in transformational communication model, 17f, 1718, 19t, 25, 81f, 8185 Perception in common meaning creation, 4647 errors in, 34 high-level communication competency and, 3134, 32f33f of illness, 9699 motivation and, 33, 33f process of, 3133, 32f33f self-concept in, 30, 30f, 3539, 39f Perception checking, 3435 Performance inputs and outputs in nursing work system, 167, 167f Person approach to patient care errors, 161 Personal attack response to, 102 Personal control over environment as North American value, 6265 Personal space culture and, 113 in nurse-patient communication, 111113, 112b113b Personal zone in personal space, 51, 112, 112b Physical communication context dened, 24 Physical discomfort gender and, 73 Physical illness stages communication climate and, 97 Physical needs of communicators, 19 Physical noise as communication barrier, 16, 25t as listening barrier, 53 Physical stress responses, 8687 touch and, 108 Physiological noise as communication barrier, 16, 25t Physiological risk factors patient safety, 94, 164, 165b Placater in stress response, 87 Pragmatism culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Precision in language use, 4748 Preinteraction/preorientation phase in nurse-patient relationship, 80b Privacy culture-based attitudes toward, 63 professional identity management and, 90 Process in nursing work system, 167, 167f Professional communication context dened, 2424 Professional identity management in nurse-patient relationship, 90 Progressive relaxation visual imagery in, 103b Protective touch intent of, 110 Proxemics in nonverbal behavior, 51 in nurse-patient interactions, 51b Psychological causes of error, 164, 165b Psychological communication context, 24, 24b Psychological noise as communication barrier, 16, 25t Psychomotor behavioral capabilities in patient education, 145, 152153 Psychosocial stages of illness communication climate and, 9798 Public zone in personal space, 51, 113 Purposeful disclosure as patient-safe communication strategy, 40, 41f Pygmalion effect self-concept and, 3738
199
Q
Questioning in active listening, 55
R
Rapport talk gender and, 68b, 6869 as nursing skill, 69 Readback/hearback strategy for telephone physician orders, 187 Reading level in patient education, 149150 Recognition in conrming messages, 95 of nurses feelings, 101 Reected appraisal in self-concept development, 36 Relaxation phase in response to laughter, 123 Remembering in listening, 52 Report talk gender and, 68b, 6869 as nursing skill, 69 Resentment in response to illness, 98 Resistance to change self-concept and, 37 Responding in listening, 52 Responsibility for feelings, 101102 Risk factors communication. See Communication risk factors patient safety. See Patient safety risk factors Rule-based errors, 164
S
Sadness in response to loss, 132b133b, 132141, 135b, 138b, 140b141b SBAR tool in nurse-physician communication, 187188 Selection in perception process, 31 Self-appraisal in self-concept development, 37
200
Index
Shorter hospital stays as patient safety risk factor, 170 Sick role in response to illness, 9899 Silence in active listening, 55 Situational awareness in normal cognition theory, 163 Situational context in patient-safe communication, 84, 85b Situation-background-assessmentrecommendation (SBAR) tool, 187188 Skill-based errors, 164 Slips dened, 164 Social communication context dened, 24 Social needs of communicators, 20, 20b Social permission in nursing touch, 108109 Social zone in personal space, 51, 112113, 113b Societal inuences in self-concept development, 37 Spiritual communication context dened, 24 Spirituality culture-based attitudes toward, 65 Stereotypes ambiguity and, 48 perception and, 34 Stress effects of, 85b, 8586 in nurse-patient relationship, 8590 as patient safety risk factor, 171172 as response to grief and loss, 133 touch and response to, 108 universal responses to, 86b, 8688 Subjectivity in perception, 31 Summarizing in active listening, 56 Superimposing in perception process, 32, 33f Supportive statements in active listening, 56 Sympathy empathy versus, 99100, 100b Systems approach to patient care errors, 161162
Self-awareness cultural sensitivity and, 62 perception and, 3839, 39f strategies to increase, 3839, 39f Self-concept characteristics of, 3738 dened, 30 development of, 3537 importance of touch in, 107108 in transformational communication model, 30, 30f Self-disclosure types of, 3940, 41f Self-esteem communication and relationships and, 4041 dened, 30, 40 illness as threat to, 9699 strategies to improve, 41, 42t, 43 in transformational communication model, 30, 30f Self-help culture-based attitudes toward, 6364 Self-sacrice gender and, 69 Self-serving bias perception and, 34 Semantic noise as communication barrier, 16, 25t Sensitivity in high-level communication competency, 13, 13f Sentinel event dened, 4 Setting professional identity management and, 90 Sexually oriented humor gender and, 125 Shaking hands in nursing touch, 111 Shared information in clinical decision making, 57 disclosure and, 40, 41f Shared message creation transactional model of, 1516, 16f
T
Tag questions ambiguity and, 48 gender and, 7172 nursing and, 72 Tall man lettering to reduce medication errors, 187 Task touch intent of, 110 Tattoos professional identity management and, 90 Teaching plan evaluation of, 154, 154b implementation of, 153 in patient education, 152155, 154b strategies in, 152153 Teachinglearning principles in patient education, 147151, 148b149b Tears. See Crying Teasing as conversational ritual, 7273 Telephone communications as communication channels, 2122 medication orders as, 188 readback/hearback strategy for, 187 SBAR tool in, 187188 Temporal communication context dened, 24 Tension release crying in, 137 Termination phase in nurse-patient relationship, 80b Thanking as conversational ritual, 72 Therapeutic humor in patient-safe communication, 120 Time culture-based attitudes toward, 63
Index
Tone of voice in nonverbal behavior, 50 Touch, 105115 culture and, 105 inhibition of, 110111 intent of, 109b, 109110 in nonverbal behavior, 51 nursing protocol for, 110115, 112b114b overview of, 106 painful, 113, 113b patients aversion to, 114b personal space and, 111113, 112b113b types of, 107, 107b, 109b, 109110 Transactional model of communication, 1516, 16f Transfer of care, 5, 161, 183186 Transformational model of communication, 1626 in communication climate transformation, 99100 communicator perceptions in, 2943, 30f, 32f33f, 39f, 41f creating common meaning in, 4557 elements of, 18t19t, 1925 overview of, 1618, 17f patient-safe communication in, 17f, 1718, 81b, 81f, 8185 risk factors in, 25, 25t Transformational outcome in transformational communication model, 17f, 1718, 19t, 25 Transition to illness psychosocial stage of, 98 Two-challenge rule in health-care team communication, 182
201
as self-esteem improvement strategy, 42t Visual impairment patient education and, 149b patient-safe communication in, 85 Voice tone in nonverbal behavior, 50
W U
Understanding in listening, 52 Universal stress responses, 8788 Unsafe acts dened, 169 Unshared information patient safety and, 56 Weeping. See Crying Work environment as patient safety risk factor, 171172 Work orientation culture-based attitudes toward, 64 Working memory in normal cognition theory, 163 Working phase in nurse-patient relationship, 80b Workload as patient safety risk factor, 172 World Health Organization handoff guidelines of, 185186 patient safety goals of, 8 Written communication channels, 22
V
Validation in transformational communication model, 17f, 19t, 2324 Values in self-concept, 36 Verbal language in common meaning creation, 4648 gender and, 68b, 6869, 7173 Violations safety, 165166 Visual imagery/visualizations in managing emotions, 103b
Y
Young adulthood losses in, 134