Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Study

Video-based communication assessment of physician error disclosure skills by crowdsourced laypeople and patient advocates who experienced medical harm: reliability assessment with generalizability theory.

White AA, King AM, D'Addario AE, et al. Video-based communication assessment of physician error disclosure skills by crowdsourced laypeople and patient advocates who experienced medical harm: reliability assessment with generalizability theory. JMIR Med Educ. 2022;8(2):e30988, doi: 10.2196/30988

Save
Print
May 18, 2022
White AA, King AM, D’Addario AE, et al. JMIR Med Educ. 2022;8(2):e30988.
View more articles from the same authors.

Communication with patients and caregivers is important after a diagnostic error. Using a simulated case involving delayed diagnosis of breast cancer, this study compared how crowdsourced laypeople and patient advocates rate physician disclosure communication skills. Findings suggest that patient advocates rate communication skills more stringently than laypeople, but laypeople can correctly identify physicians with high and low communication skills.

Save
Print
Cite
Citation

White AA, King AM, D'Addario AE, et al. Video-based communication assessment of physician error disclosure skills by crowdsourced laypeople and patient advocates who experienced medical harm: reliability assessment with generalizability theory. JMIR Med Educ. 2022;8(2):e30988, doi: 10.2196/30988

Related Resources From the Same Author(s)
Related Resources