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Assessing Physician-Parent Communication During Emergency Medical Procedures in Children An Observational Study in a Low-Literacy Latino Patient Population
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Assessing Physician-Parent Communication During Emergency Medical Procedures in Children An Observational Study in a Low-Literacy Latino Patient Population

Aaron Dahl, Madhumita Sinha, David I. Rosenberg, Melissa Tran and Andre Valdez
Pediatric emergency care, Vol.31(5), pp.339-342
05/2015
PMID: 25875993

Abstract

Emergency Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Pediatrics Science & Technology
Objective: Effective physician-patient communication is critical to the clinical decision-making process. We studied parental recall of information provided during an informed consent discussion process before performance of emergency medical procedures in a pediatric emergency department of an inner-city hospital with a large bilingual population. Methods: Fifty-five parent/child dyads undergoing emergency medical procedures were surveyed prospectively in English/Spanish postprocedure for recall of informed consent information. Exact logistic regression was used to predict the ability to name a risk, benefit, and alternative to the procedure based on a parent's language, education, and acculturation. Results: Among English-speaking parents, there tended to be higher proportions that could name a risk, benefit, or alternative. Our regression models showed overall that the parents with more than a high school education tended to have nearly 5 times higher odds of being able to name a risk. Conclusions: A gap in communication may exist between physicians and patients (or parents of patients) during the consent-taking process, and this gap may be impacted by socio-demographic factors such as language and education level.

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