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ABSTRACT: Objectives
To evaluate racial and ethnic differences in communication quality during family centered rounds.Methods
We conducted an observational study of family-centered rounds on hospital day 1. All enrolled caregivers completed a survey following rounds and a subset consented to audio record their encounter with the medical team. We applied a priori defined codes to transcriptions of the audio-recorded encounters to assess objective communication quality, including medical team behaviors, caregiver participatory behaviors, and global communication scores. The surveys were designed to measure subjective communication quality. Incident Rate Ratios (IRR) were calculated with regression models to compare the relative mean number of behaviors per encounter time minute by race and ethnicity.Results
Overall, 202 of 341 eligible caregivers completed the survey, and 59 had accompanying audio- recorded rounds. We found racial and ethnic differences in participatory behaviors: English-speaking Latinx (IRR 0.5; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.3-0.8) Black (IRR 0.6; 95% CI 0.4-0.8), and Spanish-speaking Latinx caregivers (IRR 0.3; 95% CI 0.2-0.5) participated less than white caregivers. Coder-rated global ratings of medical team respect and partnership were lower for Black and Spanish-speaking Latinx caregivers than white caregivers (respect 3.1 and 2.9 vs 3.6, P values .03 and .04, respectively: partnership 2.4 and 2.3 vs 3.1, P values .03 and .04 respectively). In surveys, Spanish-speaking caregivers reported lower subjective communication quality in several domains.Conclusions
In this study, Black and Latinx caregivers were treated with less partnership and respect than white caregivers.
SUBMITTER: Parente VM
PROVIDER: S-EPMC9724176 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Parente Victoria M VM Reid Hadley W HW Robles Joanna J Johnson Kimberly S KS Svetkey Laura P LP Sanders Linda L LL Olsen Maren K MK Pollak Kathryn I KI
Pediatrics 20221201 6
<h4>Objectives</h4>To evaluate racial and ethnic differences in communication quality during family centered rounds.<h4>Methods</h4>We conducted an observational study of family-centered rounds on hospital day 1. All enrolled caregivers completed a survey following rounds and a subset consented to audio record their encounter with the medical team. We applied a priori defined codes to transcriptions of the audio-recorded encounters to assess objective communication quality, including medical tea ...[more]