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      Interventions for improving medical students' interpersonal communication in medical consultations

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          Most cited references285

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          Self-efficacy: Toward a unifying theory of behavioral change.

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            Social Foundations of Thought and Action : A Social Cognitive Theory

            Presents a comprehensive theory of human motivation and action from a social-cognitive perspective. This insightful text addresses the prominent roles played by cognitive, vicarious, self-regulatory, and self-reflective processes in psychosocial functioning; emphasizes reciprocal causation through the interplay of cognitive, behavioral, and environmental factors; and systematically applies the basic principles of this theory to personal and social change.
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              How does communication heal? Pathways linking clinician-patient communication to health outcomes.

              Although prior research indicates that features of clinician-patient communication can predict health outcomes weeks and months after the consultation, the mechanisms accounting for these findings are poorly understood. While talk itself can be therapeutic (e.g., lessening the patient's anxiety, providing comfort), more often clinician-patient communication influences health outcomes via a more indirect route. Proximal outcomes of the interaction include patient understanding, trust, and clinician-patient agreement. These affect intermediate outcomes (e.g., increased adherence, better self-care skills) which, in turn, affect health and well-being. Seven pathways through which communication can lead to better health include increased access to care, greater patient knowledge and shared understanding, higher quality medical decisions, enhanced therapeutic alliances, increased social support, patient agency and empowerment, and better management of emotions. Future research should hypothesize pathways connecting communication to health outcomes and select measures specific to that pathway. Clinicians and patients should maximize the therapeutic effects of communication by explicitly orienting communication to achieve intermediate outcomes (e.g., trust, mutual understanding, adherence, social support, self-efficacy) associated with improved health.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                146518
                Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
                Wiley
                14651858
                February 09 2021
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Medicine and Public Health; University of Newcastle, Hunter Medical Research Institute; Callaghan Australia
                [2 ]Centre for Investigative Interviewing, Griffith Criminology Institute; Griffith University; Brisbane Australia
                [3 ]School of Rural Health; Monash University; Bendigo Australia
                [4 ]Institute for Positive Psychology and Education; Australian Catholic University; Strathfield Australia
                [5 ]School of Medicine and Public Health; University of Newcastle; Callaghan Australia
                [6 ]The Matilda Centre for Research in Mental Health and Substance Use; University of Sydney; Darlington Australia
                [7 ]School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy; University of Newcastle; Callaghan Australia
                [8 ]School of Clinical Medicine; University of Cambridge; Cambridge UK
                Article
                10.1002/14651858.CD012418.pub2
                33559127
                3c83b2f4-cd23-4674-935d-d0fbdf201cf8
                © 2021
                History

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