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Background Concern that case presentations at the bedside may make patients uncomfortable has led many residency programs to move presentations to the conference room. We performed a randomized, controlled trial of the effect of these two approaches on patients' perceptions of their care.
Methods The study patients were adults admitted to the general medical service of a teaching hospital. Four house-staff "firms" (each comprising teams of physicians) were randomly assigned to make their case presentations during morning rounds either at the patient's bedside or in a conference room for one week, to switch to the alternate site for a second week, and to return to the initial site for a third week. To assess patients' perceptions, a questionnaire was administered within 24 hours of admission.
Results During the three weeks of the study, 95 patients had bedside presentations and 87 patients had conference-room presentations. When the former were compared with the latter, the patients with bedside presentations reported that their doctors spent more time with them on morning rounds (10 vs. 6 minutes, P<0.001). The patients with bedside presentations were also somewhat more likely to report favorable perceptions of their inpatient care (range of adjusted odds ratios, 1.12 to 2.17), although none of the associations were statistically significant. Better-educated patients were less likely to report that physicians used confusing terminology and explained tests and medications inadequately than were patients who had not completed high school.
Conclusions These data suggest that from the patient's perspective, bedside case presentations are at least as good as conference-room presentations, and perhaps preferable. When physicians make presentations at the bedside of less well educated patients, they should be especially careful to avoid medical jargon and to explain fully their plans for inpatient care.
Source Information
From the Departments of Medicine (L.S.L., F.L.B., A.S.D.), Epidemiology (F.L.B.), Health Policy and Management (D.R.), and Biostatistics (M.-C.C.), Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Brancati at the Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research, 2024 East Monument St., Suite 2-600, Baltimore, MD 21205-2223.
Related Letters:
Bedside Presentations and Patients' Perceptions of Their Medical Care
Ruffy R., Bellet P. S., Glass A. R., Lehmann L. S., Brancati F. L., Dobs A. S., Thibault G. E.
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Full Text
N Engl J Med 1997;
337:714-716, Sep 4, 1997.
Correspondence
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