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Published in: BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies 1/2023

Open Access 01-12-2023 | Research

An exploratory study of communication training for Chinese medicine practitioners in Hong Kong to integrate patients’ conventional medical history

Authors: Jack Pun, Brandon Kong

Published in: BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

Despite Traditional Chinese medicine’s (TCM) historical roles in Chinese society, few research has been investigated the nature of TCM practitioner–patient interactions. Improved communication skills among TCM practitioners will result higher-quality interactions and better clinical outcomes.

Methods

To investigate the changes in TCM practitioners’ communication practices after communications training focused on promoting their awareness of integrating a patient’s medical history from conventional medicine in TCM treatment, Eight registered Cantonese-speaking TCM practitioners in Hong Kong were randomly recruited from local clinics and randomised into control (n = 12) and experimental groups (n = 12), with a total of 24 consultations. The experimental group was given training focused on patient-centred communication, with an internationally recognised and communication framework validated in global consultation settings (i.e. the Calgary-Cambridge Guide) on how to take a patient’s medical history from conventional medicine and communicate diagnosis and treatment plans. Consultations before and after training were audio-recorded and rated. The efficacy of the training was evaluated by comparing the two groups before training (pre-test), immediately after training (post-test) and after a 3-month delay (delayed post-test). Using validated scales, the primary outcomes were measured for the practitioners’ clinical communication skills and the quality of interactions.

Results

The communication training significantly improved the TCM providers’ patient-centred communication and communication proficiency. The results indicate that the team developed an effective communication model for integrating TCM and conventional medicine in Hong Kong. The framework helps trained TCM practitioners to integrate their patients’ conventional medical history when delivering patient care. The findings shed light on how interpersonal relationships between TCM practitioners and patients can be constructed after communication training to better care for patients’ psychological concerns in addition to their physical needs.

Conclusion

Trained TCM practitioners can provide an integrated model that takes patients’ conventional medical history into account when delivering a holistic patient-centred care. The findings can enhance our understanding of better ways to train the future TCM practitioners and to develop a continuing professional training for the current TCM practitioners to expand our understanding of TCM communication in acute clinical contexts and, thus offer a firm evidence-based foundation upon which to develop communication strategies that improve their clinical cpractices.
Footnotes
1
For the purpose of this study, the number of turns refers to the practitioners’ utterances only. As all TCM consultations involve two individuals – a practitioner and a patient – the number of turns in the overall consultation was double the number indicated here (i.e. 13 turns uttered by the practitioner means that the consultation was 26 turns long including the patients’ utterances).
 
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Metadata
Title
An exploratory study of communication training for Chinese medicine practitioners in Hong Kong to integrate patients’ conventional medical history
Authors
Jack Pun
Brandon Kong
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies / Issue 1/2023
Electronic ISSN: 2662-7671
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12906-022-03811-x

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