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Physiotherapy Theory and Practice
An International Journal of Physical Therapy
Volume 38, 2022 - Issue 8
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Descriptive Report

Using the consultation-based reassurance questionnaire to assess reassurance skills among physiotherapy students: reliability and responsiveness

, PhD, PTORCID Icon & , PhD, M.Phil, MSc
Pages 1071-1077 | Received 13 Oct 2019, Accepted 19 Jul 2020, Published online: 02 Sep 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Background

There is a robust body of evidence suggesting that communication skills during consultations are associated with patient satisfaction and adherence. Training practitioners to improve communication and reassurance delivery is therefore desirable. The Consultation-Based Reassurance Questionnaire (CRQ) for people presenting with back pain has not been tested as a tool to examine the reliability and responsiveness of communication training for practitioners.

Objective

To translate and examine the reliability of the CRQ and to explore its ability to detect change (responsiveness) before and after a single session of training in communication skills.

Methods

Thirty-five simulated consultations were recorded. 36 second-year physiotherapy students took part, either as a simulated patient or a simulated physiotherapist. All videotape simulations were rated independently by two trained observers, using the CRQ.

Results

Correlations indicate that the two raters were significantly and highly correlated (r = 0.9, 95% CI 0.797–0.951). The responsiveness statistics were in the moderate range for the total CRQ score, with moderate responsiveness range for data-gathering and relationship-building, and acceptable responsiveness for generic and cognitive reassurance.

Conclusion

The CRQ Scale shows good reliability and acceptable levels of responsiveness to detect change before and after training in communication skills in physiotherapy students. The scale requires testing in real-life settings to establish better responsiveness.

Acknowledgments

We thank Michal Lev & Michal Liberman  for the dedicated work in coding the simulated videos. We thank all the physiotherapy students for their cooperation, and we thank Pavel Freidlin  for his statistical services.

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