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The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study

BACKGROUND: Patients increasingly use web-based evaluation tools to assess their physicians, health care teams, and overall medical experience. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the extent to which the standardized physician competencies of the CanMEDS Framework are present in web-based patien...

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Autores principales: Morena, Nina, Zelt, Nicholas, Nguyen, Diana, Dionne, Emilie, Rentschler, Carrie A, Greyson, Devon, Meguerditchian, Ari N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10196901/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37140959
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/39857
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author Morena, Nina
Zelt, Nicholas
Nguyen, Diana
Dionne, Emilie
Rentschler, Carrie A
Greyson, Devon
Meguerditchian, Ari N
author_facet Morena, Nina
Zelt, Nicholas
Nguyen, Diana
Dionne, Emilie
Rentschler, Carrie A
Greyson, Devon
Meguerditchian, Ari N
author_sort Morena, Nina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patients increasingly use web-based evaluation tools to assess their physicians, health care teams, and overall medical experience. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the extent to which the standardized physician competencies of the CanMEDS Framework are present in web-based patient reviews (WPRs) and to identify patients’ perception of important physician qualities in the context of quality cancer care. METHODS: The WPRs of all university-affiliated medical oncologists in midsized cities with medical schools in the province of Ontario (Canada) were collected. Two reviewers (1 communication studies researcher and 1 health care professional) independently assessed the WPRs according to the CanMEDS Framework and identified common themes. Comment scores were then evaluated to identify κ agreement rates between the reviewers, and a descriptive quantitative analysis of the cohort was completed. Following the quantitative analysis, an inductive thematic analysis was performed. RESULTS: This study identified 49 actively practicing university-affiliated medical oncologists in midsized urban areas in Ontario. A total of 473 WPRs reviewing these 49 physicians were identified. Among the CanMEDS competencies, those defining the roles of medical experts, communicators, and professionals were the most prevalent (303/473, 64%; 182/473, 38%; and 129/473, 27%, respectively). Common themes in WPRs include medical skill and knowledge, interpersonal skills, and answering questions (from the patient to the physician). Detailed WPRs tend to include the following elements: experience and connection; discussion and evaluation of the physician’s knowledge, professionalism, interpersonal skills, and punctuality; in positive reviews, the expression of feelings of gratitude and a recommendation; and in negative reviews, discouragement from seeking the physician’s care. Patients’ perception of medical skills is less specific than their perception of interpersonal qualities, although medical skills are the most commented-on element of care in WPRs. Patients’ perception of interpersonal skills (listening, compassion, and overall caring demeanor) and other experiential phenomena, such as feeling rushed during appointments, is often specific and detailed. Details about a physician’s interpersonal skills or “bedside manner” are highly perceived, valued, and shareable in an WPR context. A small number of WPRs reflected a distinction between the value of medical skills and that of interpersonal skills. The authors of these WPRs claimed that for them, a physician’s medical skills and competence are more important than their interpersonal skills. CONCLUSIONS: CanMEDS roles and competencies that are explicitly patient facing (ie, those directly experienced by patients in their interactions with physicians and through the care that physicians provide) are the most likely to be present and reported on in WPRs. The findings demonstrate the opportunity to learn from WPRs, not simply to discern physicians’ popularity but to grasp what patients may expect from their physicians. In this context, WPRs can represent a method for the measurement and assessment of patient-facing physician competency.
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spelling pubmed-101969012023-05-20 The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study Morena, Nina Zelt, Nicholas Nguyen, Diana Dionne, Emilie Rentschler, Carrie A Greyson, Devon Meguerditchian, Ari N JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Patients increasingly use web-based evaluation tools to assess their physicians, health care teams, and overall medical experience. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the extent to which the standardized physician competencies of the CanMEDS Framework are present in web-based patient reviews (WPRs) and to identify patients’ perception of important physician qualities in the context of quality cancer care. METHODS: The WPRs of all university-affiliated medical oncologists in midsized cities with medical schools in the province of Ontario (Canada) were collected. Two reviewers (1 communication studies researcher and 1 health care professional) independently assessed the WPRs according to the CanMEDS Framework and identified common themes. Comment scores were then evaluated to identify κ agreement rates between the reviewers, and a descriptive quantitative analysis of the cohort was completed. Following the quantitative analysis, an inductive thematic analysis was performed. RESULTS: This study identified 49 actively practicing university-affiliated medical oncologists in midsized urban areas in Ontario. A total of 473 WPRs reviewing these 49 physicians were identified. Among the CanMEDS competencies, those defining the roles of medical experts, communicators, and professionals were the most prevalent (303/473, 64%; 182/473, 38%; and 129/473, 27%, respectively). Common themes in WPRs include medical skill and knowledge, interpersonal skills, and answering questions (from the patient to the physician). Detailed WPRs tend to include the following elements: experience and connection; discussion and evaluation of the physician’s knowledge, professionalism, interpersonal skills, and punctuality; in positive reviews, the expression of feelings of gratitude and a recommendation; and in negative reviews, discouragement from seeking the physician’s care. Patients’ perception of medical skills is less specific than their perception of interpersonal qualities, although medical skills are the most commented-on element of care in WPRs. Patients’ perception of interpersonal skills (listening, compassion, and overall caring demeanor) and other experiential phenomena, such as feeling rushed during appointments, is often specific and detailed. Details about a physician’s interpersonal skills or “bedside manner” are highly perceived, valued, and shareable in an WPR context. A small number of WPRs reflected a distinction between the value of medical skills and that of interpersonal skills. The authors of these WPRs claimed that for them, a physician’s medical skills and competence are more important than their interpersonal skills. CONCLUSIONS: CanMEDS roles and competencies that are explicitly patient facing (ie, those directly experienced by patients in their interactions with physicians and through the care that physicians provide) are the most likely to be present and reported on in WPRs. The findings demonstrate the opportunity to learn from WPRs, not simply to discern physicians’ popularity but to grasp what patients may expect from their physicians. In this context, WPRs can represent a method for the measurement and assessment of patient-facing physician competency. JMIR Publications 2023-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10196901/ /pubmed/37140959 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/39857 Text en ©Nina Morena, Nicholas Zelt, Diana Nguyen, Emilie Dionne, Carrie A Rentschler, Devon Greyson, Ari N Meguerditchian. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 04.05.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Morena, Nina
Zelt, Nicholas
Nguyen, Diana
Dionne, Emilie
Rentschler, Carrie A
Greyson, Devon
Meguerditchian, Ari N
The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study
title The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study
title_full The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study
title_fullStr The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study
title_full_unstemmed The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study
title_short The Use of Web-Based Patient Reviews to Assess Medical Oncologists’ Competency: Mixed Methods Sequential Explanatory Study
title_sort use of web-based patient reviews to assess medical oncologists’ competency: mixed methods sequential explanatory study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10196901/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37140959
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/39857
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