1 / 16

You can improve your communication skills

You can improve your communication skills. Module 3. Learning objectives. E xplain what communication is and why it is important D emonstrate active listening D escribe some non verbal and verbal communication skills D emonstrate good communication skills. Communication skills.

Télécharger la présentation

You can improve your communication skills

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. You can improve your communication skills Module 3

  2. Learning objectives • Explain what communication is and why it is important • Demonstrate active listening • Describe some non verbal and verbal communication skills • Demonstrate good communication skills

  3. Communication skills • Listening exercise One study showed that doctors interrupt their patients after an average of 18 seconds

  4. Communication • What do we mean by communication? • giving and receiving messages • aim to reach understanding • important to PC • skills can be learned ‘ a process of understanding and anticipating the actions and reactions of another individual’ Neumann

  5. Communication • Why is it important?

  6. Communication • Good communication • creates relationships • gives value to the other person • reduces isolation • gathers and gives information • enables expression of feelings • reduces uncertainty • maintains hope

  7. Listening skills • Find a quiet place if possible • Sit at the patient’s level • Pay attention, keep eye contact • Active listening • Allow silence, do not interrupt • Clarify and summarise

  8. Listening skills • Non-verbal • keep eye contact, pay attention • sit near the patient at their level • relaxed posture, sit forwards and keep still • allow silence, don’t interrupt • encouraging responses • facial expression • appropriate touch

  9. Typical scene

  10. Listening skills • Verbal • asking questions/ eliciting emotions • empathising responses • clarifying • reframing • allowing silences • summarising • planning for the next step

  11. Good communication • patient telling more about symptoms and concerns • physicians collect better information and makes more accurate diagnosis • clinicians better understands and responds to patient’s individual needs hence better therapeutic action • enhanced communication • improved patient outcome

  12. Communication • Practicing skills • role play

  13. Case Scenario • A woman of 40 has breast cancer which has spread to her bones. • her pain is being treated by medicines from the hospital • she comes to you very worried • she has three children . Her husband is not very supportive

  14. Summing up • What was difficult? • What was surprising? • What have you learnt? • What you need to practice? • How can you put it into practice?

  15. Final reminder • ‘Most components of communication techniques can be taught and these learned skills have an impact on the physician's ability to communicate better’ • Buckman R, Communication skills in palliative care: a practical guide, NeurolClin. 2001 Nov;19(4):989-1004.

  16. These resources are developed as part of the THET multi-country project whose goal is to strengthen and integrate palliative care into national health systems through a public health primary care approach • Acknowledgement given to Cairdeas International Palliative Care Trust and MPCU for their preparation and adaptation • part of the teaching materials for the Palliative Care Toolkit training with modules as per the Training Manual • can be used as basic PC presentations when facilitators are encouraged to adapt and make contextual

More Related