Skip Navigation Archive: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Archive: Agency for Healthcare Research Quality www.ahrq.gov
Archival print banner

This information is for reference purposes only. It was current when produced and may now be outdated. Archive material is no longer maintained, and some links may not work. Persons with disabilities having difficulty accessing this information should contact us at: https://info.ahrq.gov. Let us know the nature of the problem, the Web address of what you want, and your contact information.

Please go to www.ahrq.gov for current information.

Confirming and Supplementing CAHPS® Communication Items Using Feedback from High-Performing Physicians

AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation

On September 11, 2012, Ronald Hays and Denise Quigley made this presentation at the 2012 Annual Conference.

Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (785 KB).

Slide 1

Text Description is below the image.

Confirming and Supplementing CAHPS® Communication Items Using Feedback from High-Performing Physicians

Ron D. Hays, Ph.D.,
Professor of Medicine and Health Services, UCLA.
Denise D. Quigley, Ph.D.,
CAHPS Quality Improvement Team, RAND.
AHRQ Conference.

September 11, 2012 (8-9:30am session)

Image: The RAND HEALTH logo is shown.

Slide 2

Text Description is below the image.

Presentation Outline

  • Why focus on doctor-patient communication?
  • Do CAHPS surveys capture important elements of doctor-patient communication from physician perspective?
  • Feedback from high-performing physicians.
  • Summary and implications.

Slide 3

Text Description is below the image.

Presentation Outline

  • Why focus on doctor-patient communication?
  • Do CAHPS surveys capture important elements of doctor-patient communication from physician perspective?
  • Feedback from high-performing physicians.
  • Summary and implications.

Slide 4

Text Description is below the image.

Doctor-Patient Communication Is Critically Important to Patients

  • Good communication skills are among the qualities most desired:
    • Doctor listens to patient concerns.
    • Doctor explains health problems clearly.
  • Effective communication is key to positive patient-doctor relationships.
  • Patient reports about communication are strongly associated with global ratings.

Slide 5

Text Description is below the image.

Communication Measures used to Improve Patient Experience

  • Quality improvement.
  • Element of pay-for-performance systems.
  • Recognition as a patient-centered medical home.

Slide 6

Text Description is below the image.

Presentation Outline

  • Why focus on doctor-patient communication?
  • Do CAHPS surveys capture important elements of doctor-patient communication from physician perspective?
  • Feedback from high-performing physicians.
  • Summary and implications.

Slide 7

Text Description is below the image.

CAHPS Surveys Address Communication from Patient Perspective

  • During CAHPS development, consumers identify important aspects of care.
  • Patients are the best or only source of information for most measures.
  • Clinician and Group (CG) CAHPS topics include:
    • Doctor-patient communication.
    • Access.
    • Coordination of care.
    • Courtesy and helpfulness of office staff.
    • Overall rating of doctor.

Slide 8

Text Description is below the image.

Physicians Have Invaluable.Perspective on Communication Items

  • As CAHPS stakeholders, physicians are consulted during CAHPS survey development.
  • But physicians are not interviewed about best practices related to communication.

Slide 9

Text Description is below the image.

We Asked High-Performing Physicians...

How well do the CAHPS survey items capture the important elements of doctor-patient communication?

Slide 10

Text Description is below the image.

Existing Collaboration with Health Plan Facilitated Exploratory Study

Health plan:

  • Has 72,000 adult, commercial HMO members.
  • Administers CAHPS clinician-group survey annually (2005-2012).
  • Uses CAHPS for P4P, Q.I., and reporting.
  • Was interested in physician perspective.
  • Gave us physician-level CAHPS data and contact information.
  • Permitted us to contact their physicians.

Slide 11

Text Description is below the image.

High-Performing Physicians on .CAHPS were Identified

  • 2008 CAHPS data:
    • 20,141 patients among 259 primary care physicians (46% response rate).
  • Calculated overall z-score (0-100 score):
    • Average of CAHPS composites (access, communication, office staff) and global rating of physician.
  • Rank ordered the 259 doctors by z-score.

Slide 12

Text Description is below the image.

Physician Interviews.

  • Contacted the 40 highest-ranked doctors; interviewed 11 physicians who were willing.
  • Used a semi-structured, open-ended protocol with 36 questions:
    • Basic information about practice.
    • Philosophy of providing good care.
    • Communication behaviors during patient visits.
    • Office practices related to communication.
  • Taped and transcribed interviews.

Slide 13

Text Description is below the image.

Themes Coded...

  • Coded the content of the interviews for important themes.
  • Created unique counts of codes per physicians; found 16 themes.
  • Two researchers independently coded the presence or absence of each of the 16 themes:
    • Calculated a pooled kappa to assess.inter-rater agreement for 16 themes (0.72).

Slide 14

Text Description is below the image.

...and Compared Themes to Behaviors Captured in CAHPS Survey Items

  • Core CAHPS items:
    • Doctor-patient communication.
  • Supplemental CAHPS items:
    • Health information and promotion.
    • Shared decisionmaking.
    • Patient-centered medical home items.
    • Cultural competence.
    • Health literacy.
    • Health information technology.

Slide 15

Text Description is below the image.

Presentation Outline

  • Why focus on doctor-patient communication?
  • Do CAHPS surveys capture important elements of doctor-patient communication from physician perspective?
  • Feedback from high-performing physicians.
  • Summary and implications.

Slide 16

Text Description is below the image.

Physicians Identified 16 Behaviors that Support Communication

  • 9 mentioned by more than 7 of 11 physicians.
  • 6 of 9 most frequently mentioned behaviors captured in current CAHPS items.
  • 3 behaviors identified for further survey item development.

Slide 17

Text Description is below the image.

Nine Behaviors Mentioned Frequently (n = 11 physicians)

  1. Employ office staff with good people skills (91%).
  2. Use non-verbal communication (82%).
  3. Involve office staff in communication with patients (82%).
  4. Spend enough time with patients; don't act hurried (73%).
  5. Listen carefully (73%).
  6. Provide clear, simple explanations (64%).
  7. Greet patients by shaking hands, introducing self (64%).
  8. Ask social or personal questions; track and follow this information (64%).
  9. Devise action plans/next steps at each visit (64%).

Slide 18

Text Description is below the image.

CAHPS Captures Six of the.Nine Behaviors.

  1. Employ office staff with good people skills.
  2. Use non-verbal communication.
  3. Involve office staff in communication with patients.
  4. Spend enough time with patients; don't act hurried.
  5. Listen carefully.
  6. Provide clear, simple explanations.
  7. Greet patients by shaking hands, introducing self.
  8. Ask social or personal questions; track and follow this information.
  9. Devise action plans/next steps at each visit.

Slide 19

Text Description is below the image.

Presentation Outline

  • Why focus on doctor-patient communication?
  • Do CAHPS surveys capture important elements of doctor-patient communication from physician perspective?
  • Feedback from high-performing physicians.
  • Summary and implications.

Slide 20

Text Description is below the image.

Summary of Findings

  • CAHPS survey items capture many of the communication behaviors most frequently mentioned by high performing physicians.
  • Three aspects of communication are not captured by current CAHPS items:
    • Non-verbal communication.
    • Greeting the patient.
    • Tracking personal information about the patient.

Slide 21

Text Description is below the image.

Possible Next Steps

  • Testing and developing additional patient experience-of-care measures:
    • Nonverbal communication.
    • Physician greeting and introducing self to patient and family.
    • Physician tracking of personal information about patient.
  • Further research is important to understand additional value and association with other patient experience measures.

Slide 22

Text Description is below the image.

Image: The RAND HEALTH logo is shown.

Page last reviewed December 2012
Internet Citation: Confirming and Supplementing CAHPS® Communication Items Using Feedback from High-Performing Physicians: AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation. December 2012. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://archive.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2012/track_c/76_dyer_hays/hays.html

 

The information on this page is archived and provided for reference purposes only.

 

AHRQ Advancing Excellence in Health Care