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Effective Communication of Pathology Results to Requesting Practitioners and Consumers

Background

Page last updated: 14 May 2013

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  • Table of contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Executive Summary
  • Background
    • Motivation for the Study
    • Why patients need to be informed
    • Limitations of Current Pathology Reports
  • Study Design Overview
    • Aim
    • Methodology
    • Ethical Approval
    • Advisory Group
  • Literature Review
    • Aim of the Literature Review
    • Resources Used
    • Relevant Literature Identified
    • Outcomes of the Literature Review: Effective Communication of Health Information
      • Content of Communicated Information
      • Communication Tools
      • Communication Formats
      • Typefaces of the Communicated Information
      • CALD Appropriate Communication
    • Initial Design Principles
  • Eye Tracking Experiment
    • The Test
    • Recruitment
    • Experiment Questions
    • Results from the pictorial prototype
      • What Information Participants Examined (Attention)
      • What Information Participants Understood (Comprehension)
      • What Information Participants Remembered (Retention)
    • Results from the Control Report (Current Pathology Report)
    • Derived Design Guidelines
  • Consultations with Stakeholders
    • Method
    • Feedback from Stakeholders
  • Patient and Carer Focus Groups
    • Recruitment
    • Focus Group Structure
    • Focus Group Questions
    • Feedback from Patient Focus Groups
      • The Control Report
      • Compliance
      • Information Preferences and Needs
      • Preferences between Prototypes
      • Differences between Arabic and English-Speaking Groups
  • Refinement of the Prototype
  • Mid-Project Review
  • Healthcare Professionals’ Focus Group/Dinner Workshop
    • Recruitment
    • Focus Group Structure
    • Focus Group Questions
    • Feedback from Healthcare Professionals
  • Trial of the Prototype (Pathology Pro Forma)
    • Recruitment
    • The Trial
    • General Practice Questionnaire
    • Patients Questionnaire
    • Results
      • Demographics
      • Patients’ Perceptions of the Prototype Pro forma
      • Healthcare professionals’ Perceptions of the Prototype pro forma
      • Data Analysis from Trials of the pro forma
    • Follow-up patients’ interviews
      • Demographics
      • Patients’ Perceptions of the Prototype Pro forma
  • Final Medical Practitioner Focus Group
  • Final Design Guidelines
    • Guideline overview
    • Layout
    • Text style
    • Wording
    • Colour
    • Graphs
    • Pictures
    • Individualize
    • Information-processing style
      • Story-telling narratives (case study style)
      • Fact-based style
      • Value-expressive style
      • Utilitarian style
  • Information Technology Requirements for the Prototype
    • Installation location
      • Patient data
      • Report Data
      • History
      • Diversity
      • Re-usability
      • Research data
      • Installation and Maintenance
      • Independence
      • Cost
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix 1: Samples of the report that were used in the eye tracking experiment
  • References
  • Effective Communication of Pathology Results to Requesting Practitioners and Consumers Dianella Community Health Inc Final Report – June 2012
    • Stage 1A: Establishment of partnerships
    • Stage 1B: Development of the pathology reporting template
    • GP Recruitment Report (Dianella Community Health) – June 2012
    • QUPP – Dinner Workshop – Wednesday 29th February 2012
    • Pre-Test of QUPP Pathology Proforma – March – May 2012
    • Risk Management
  • Enhancing the understanding and readability of cancer reports
    • Introduction
    • Search criteria/methodology
    • Results
      • Formatting Pathology Reports
      • Review of Existing Standards
      • Readability
      • Standardisation
      • Topography/Legibility
      • Eye Tracking
    • Summary
    • References
  • Plain Language Statement

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