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Effectiveness of Japanese SHARE model in improving Taiwanese healthcare personnel's preference for cancer truth telling
Author(s) -
Tang WoungRu,
Chen KuanYu,
Hsu ShengHui,
Juang YeongYuh,
Chiu ShinChe,
Hsiao ShuChun,
Fujimori Maiko,
Fang ChunKai
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
psycho‐oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.41
H-Index - 137
eISSN - 1099-1611
pISSN - 1057-9249
DOI - 10.1002/pon.3413
Subject(s) - truth telling , preference , test (biology) , certification , health care , medicine , affect (linguistics) , psychology , family medicine , medical education , nursing , social psychology , political science , statistics , mathematics , paleontology , communication , psychoanalysis , law , biology
Abstract Background Communication skills training (CST) based on the Japanese SHARE model of family‐centered truth telling in Asian countries has been adopted in Taiwan. However, its effectiveness in Taiwan has only been preliminarily verified. This study aimed to test the effect of SHARE model‐centered CST on Taiwanese healthcare providers' truth‐telling preference, to determine the effect size, and to compare the effect of 1‐day and 2‐day CST programs on participants' truth‐telling preference. Method For this one‐group, pretest–posttest study, 10 CST programs were conducted from August 2010 to November 2011 under certified facilitators and with standard patients. Participants (257 healthcare personnel from northern, central, southern, and eastern Taiwan) chose the 1‐day ( n = 94) or 2‐day ( n = 163) CST program as convenient. Participants' self‐reported truth‐telling preference was measured before and immediately after CST programs, with CST program assessment afterward. Results The CST programs significantly improved healthcare personnel's truth‐telling preference (mean pretest and posttest scores ± standard deviation (SD): 263.8 ± 27.0 vs. 281.8 ± 22.9, p < 0.001). The CST programs effected a significant, large ( d = 0.91) improvement in overall truth‐telling preference and significantly improved method of disclosure, emotional support, and additional information ( p < 0.001). Participation in 1‐day or 2‐day CST programs did not significantly affect participants' truth‐telling preference ( p > 0.05) except for the setting subscale. Most participants were satisfied with the CST programs (93.8%) and were willing to recommend them to colleagues (98.5%). Conclusions The SHARE model‐centered CST programs significantly improved Taiwanese healthcare personnel's truth‐telling preference. Future studies should objectively assess participants' truth‐telling preference, for example, by cancer patients, their families, and other medical team personnel and at longer times after CST programs. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.