Increasing patient participation in reproductive health consultations: An evaluation of "Smart Patient" coaching in Indonesia
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
2003
Abstract
Paternalistic models of health care, social distance between patients and providers, and cultural norms discourage patients from playing an active role in health consultations. This study tested whether individual coaching can give family planning patients the confidence and communication skills to talk more openly and more vigorously with providers. Educators met with 384 Indonesian women in clinic waiting rooms and coached them on asking questions, expressing concerns, and seeking clarification. An analysis of audiotaped consultations found that patients who received coaching articulated significantly more questions and concerns than others. Coaching narrowed differentials in active communication by patient type, age, and assertiveness, but it widened differentials by patient education and socioeconomic class. The discontinuation rate at 8 months was lower in the intervention than the control condition, but the difference was only marginally significant.
Recommended Citation
Kim, Young-Mi, Fitri Putjuk, Endang Basuki, and Adrienne Kols. 2003. "Increasing patient participation in reproductive health consultations: An evaluation of Smart Patient coaching in Indonesia," Patient Education and Counseling 50(2): 113–122.
DOI
10.1016/S0738-3991(02)00193-3
Language
English
Project
Frontiers in Reproductive Health