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Does source matter? Nurses' and Physicians' perceptions of interprofessional feedback
Author(s) -
Schaik Sandrijn M,
O'Sullivan Patricia S,
Eva Kevin W,
Irby David M,
Regehr Glenn
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1111/medu.12850
Subject(s) - perception , psychology , medicine , peer feedback , identity (music) , medical education , family medicine , nursing , social psychology , neuroscience , physics , acoustics
Objective Receptiveness to interprofessional feedback, which is important for optimal collaboration, may be influenced by ‘in‐group or out‐group’ categorisation, as suggested by social identity theory. We used an experimental design to explore how nurses and resident physicians perceive feedback from people within and outside their own professional group. Methods Paediatric residents and nurses participated in a simulation‐based team exercise. Two nurses and two physicians wrote anonymous performance feedback for each participant. Participants each received a survey containing these feedback comments with prompts to rate (i) the usefulness (ii) the positivity and (iii) their agreement with each comment. Half of the participants received feedback labelled with the feedback provider's profession (two comments correctly labelled and two incorrectly labelled). Half received unlabelled feedback and were asked to guess the provider's profession. For each group, we performed separate three‐way anova s on usefulness, positivity and agreement ratings to examine interactions between the recipient's profession, actual provider profession and perceived provider profession. Results Forty‐five out of 50 participants completed the survey. There were no significant interactions between profession of the recipient and the actual profession of the feedback provider for any of the 3 variables. Among participants who guessed the source of the feedback, we found significant interactions between the profession of the feedback recipient and the guessed source of the feedback for both usefulness (F 1,48 = 25.6; p < 0.001; η 2 = 0.35) and agreement ratings (F 1,48 = 8.49; p < 0.01; η 2 = 0.15). Nurses' ratings of feedback they guessed to be from nurses were higher than ratings of feedback they guessed to be from physicians, and vice versa. Among participants who received labelled feedback, we noted a similar interaction between the profession of the feedback recipient and labelled source of feedback for usefulness ratings (F 1,92 = 4.72; p < 0.05; η 2 = 0.05). Conclusion Our data suggest that physicians and nurses are more likely to attribute favourably perceived feedback to the in‐group than to the out‐group. This finding has potential implications for interprofessional feedback practices.