Patient Interviewing Skills
"Communication skills designed specifically for
healthcare professionals"
As healthcare professionals, you aim at improved patient health
outcomes. However, it is not unusual to see patients who do not adhere to the prescribed
medication regimen or make necessary changes to their life style habits for the
management of chronic diseases. The changes in life style habits often expected
of patients with chronic diseases include engaging in healthier eating habits,
quitting or cutting back on smoking/drinking, engaging in physical activity,
losing weight, etc. Motivational interviewing (MI) is an evidence-based
patient counseling approach to have a positive influence on your patients’
health decisions [1].
How does your learning MI benefit your patients?
How could learning MI impact your career as a healthcare professional?
Numerous studies have supported the effectiveness of MI in influencing
patients' health decisions in a positive way and its therapeutic value in
improving patient health outcomes. MI has been used for increasing patient
adherence to healthcare providers’ recommendations for various problems
including:
- Non-adherence to medication regimen [2, 3]
- Excess
weight/Obesity [4]
- Lack
of physical activity/exercise [5]
- Smoking
[6, 7]
- Drinking
(alcoholism)/substance abuse [8-10]
- Cancer
screening [11, 12]
How could learning MI impact your career as a healthcare professional?
The
manner in which providers (healthcare professionals) share information with
patients is crucial because it influences patients' perceptions of the
healthcare professional, which in turn affects patients' health decisions
(in terms of following the providers' recommendations).
A study by Villaume & Krishna [13] suggested that
physicians who offered MI counseling to patients were perceived to possess
greater medical expertise or knowledge than physicians who offered traditional
counseling. Additionally, physicians who offered MI counseling were judged as
significantly more caring, trustworthy and helpful compared to physicians who
offered traditional counseling. Also, patients' likelihood of revisiting the
physician who offered MI counseling was judged significantly greater than the
physician who offered traditional counseling.
References
1. Rollnick, S., W.R. Miller, and C.
Butler, Motivational interviewing in
health care: helping patients change behavior. 2008: The Guilford Press.
2. Berger,
B.A., H. Liang, and K.S. Hudmon, Evaluation
of software-based telephone counseling to enhance medication persistency among
patients with multiple sclerosis. Journal of the American Pharmacists
Association, 2005. 45(4): p.
466-472.
3. Golin,
C.E., et al., A 2-arm, randomized,
controlled trial of a motivational interviewing-based intervention to improve
adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) among patients failing or initiating
ART. JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 2006. 42(1): p. 42.
4. MacDonell,
K., et al., A Pilot Study of Motivational
Interviewing Targeting Weight-Related Behaviors in Overweight or Obese African
American Adolescents. Journal of Adolescent Health, 2011.
5. Kinmonth,
A.L., et al., Efficacy of a theory-based behavioural
intervention to increase physical activity in an at-risk group in primary care
(ProActive UK): a randomised trial. The Lancet, 2008. 371(9606): p. 41-48.
6. Soria,
R., et al., A randomised controlled trial
of motivational interviewing for smoking cessation. The British Journal of
General Practice, 2006. 56(531): p.
768.
7. Wakefield,
M., et al., Motivational interviewing as
a smoking cessation intervention for patients with cancer: randomized
controlled trial. Nursing research, 2004. 53(6): p. 396.
8. Bien,
T.H., W.R. Miller, and J.M. Boroughs, Motivational
interviewing with alcohol outpatients. Behavioural and Cognitive
Psychotherapy, 1993. 21(4): p.
347-356.
9. Bien,
T.H., W.R. Miller, and J.S. Tonigan, Brief
interventions for alcohol problems: a review. Addiction, 1993. 88(3): p. 315-336.
10. Miller,
W.R., R.G. Benefield, and J.S. Tonigan, Enhancing
motivation for change in problem drinking: A controlled comparison of two
therapist styles. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1993. 61(3): p. 455-461.
11. Ludman,
E.J., et al., Implementation of outreach
telephone counseling to promote mammography participation. Health education
& behavior, 1999. 26(5): p. 689.
12. Taplin,
S.H., et al., Testing reminder and
motivational telephone calls to increase screening mammography: a randomized
study. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2000. 92(3): p. 233.
13. Villaume,
W.A. and Krishna, A., An Initial
Validation of the Two Dimensional Theory of Motivational Interviewing.
Unpublished manuscript, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA, 2012.
