Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Many people find it difficult to remember information provided during medical consultations. One way of improving this may be to provide a record of the conversation. OBJECTIVES: This review examined the effects of providing recordings or summaries of their consultations to people with cancer and their families. SEARCH STRATEGY: We searched the following sources: The Cochrane Library (issue 4 2002); MEDLINE (1966 to January week 1 2003); CINAHL (1982 to December week 4 2002); Dissertation Abstracts (1861 to week 2 2003); EMBASE (1985 to week 2 2003); PsycINFO (1967 to January week 2 2003); AMED (1985 to December 2002); and Sociological Abstracts (1998 to week 2 2003). For the initial (1999) publicat...
Purpose: We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of consultations between oncologists and thei...
Background: The way in which patients receive bad news in a consultation can have a profound effect ...
Objective: To explore the hypothesis that different methods of selecting and printing information ...
BackgroundMany people find it difficult to remember information provided during medical consultation...
This systematic review investigates which interventions are effective to improve recall of medical i...
PURPOSE: There is reluctance in providing incurable cancer patients with recordings of their consult...
OBJECTIVE: The benefits of providing patients with recorded clinical consultations have been mostly ...
Purpose: Despite reports of poor patient understand-ing and recall after cancer consultations, few d...
Abstract Background The time period from diagnosis to the end of treatment is challenging for newly ...
This chapter aims to briefly review the empirical literature on the value of consultation audio-reco...
OBJECTIVE: Question prompt lists (QPLs) and consultation audio-recordings (CARs) are two communicati...
The experience of cancer is one of the most challenging and potentially devastating events that can ...
Copyright © 2002 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.E Lobb, P Butow, B Meiser, A Barratt, J Kirk, M Gat...
Communication aids can assist patients in obtaining the necessary information about their disease an...
Tools have been developed to facilitate communication and support information exchange between peopl...
Purpose: We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of consultations between oncologists and thei...
Background: The way in which patients receive bad news in a consultation can have a profound effect ...
Objective: To explore the hypothesis that different methods of selecting and printing information ...
BackgroundMany people find it difficult to remember information provided during medical consultation...
This systematic review investigates which interventions are effective to improve recall of medical i...
PURPOSE: There is reluctance in providing incurable cancer patients with recordings of their consult...
OBJECTIVE: The benefits of providing patients with recorded clinical consultations have been mostly ...
Purpose: Despite reports of poor patient understand-ing and recall after cancer consultations, few d...
Abstract Background The time period from diagnosis to the end of treatment is challenging for newly ...
This chapter aims to briefly review the empirical literature on the value of consultation audio-reco...
OBJECTIVE: Question prompt lists (QPLs) and consultation audio-recordings (CARs) are two communicati...
The experience of cancer is one of the most challenging and potentially devastating events that can ...
Copyright © 2002 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.E Lobb, P Butow, B Meiser, A Barratt, J Kirk, M Gat...
Communication aids can assist patients in obtaining the necessary information about their disease an...
Tools have been developed to facilitate communication and support information exchange between peopl...
Purpose: We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of consultations between oncologists and thei...
Background: The way in which patients receive bad news in a consultation can have a profound effect ...
Objective: To explore the hypothesis that different methods of selecting and printing information ...