Development of communication skills training for oncology clinicians to promote inclusion of the family members of LGBTQ+ people with cancer Journal Article


Authors: Rosa, W. E.; Kastrinos, A.; Banerjee, S. C.; Acquaviva, K.; Alexander, K.; McDarby, M.; Behrens, M.; Parker, P. A.
Article Title: Development of communication skills training for oncology clinicians to promote inclusion of the family members of LGBTQ+ people with cancer
Abstract: Background: LGBTQ+ persons with cancer and their families consistently face discriminatory care. In addition, clinicians report inadequate population-specific knowledge and communication skills to effectively promote LGBTQ+ inclusion. To fill this gap, we designed a communication skills training based on extant literature; multidisciplinary perspectives; and patient, family, and clinician expert engagement. Methods: Training content comprised didactic information, including exemplar videos of communication strategies, and experiential learning roleplay opportunities with standardized patient and family member actors. Two training sessions were conducted virtually with invited multidisciplinary clinicians using convenience sampling. Each training was followed by a one-hour, semi-structured focus group to solicit feedback on participants' experiences and recommendations for improvement. Focus group transcripts were thematically analyzed using a constant comparative approach. Results: Two major themes were identified: key takeaways from the training and recommendations for improvement. Participants reported favorable learning experiences and believed the training would have a positive influence on future clinical interactions. We synthesized recommendations into five discrete pieces of feedback related to (1) the advanced level of training material; (2) diversity throughout the training; (3) complexity of family dynamics; and (4) recovery from communication mistakes; and (5) additional topics for future training. Based on feedback, corresponding changes for each item and a refined communication skills blueprint are provided. Conclusions: Our innovative training on inclusive cancer care for LGBTQ+ patients' families will provide both knowledge-based and experiential learning opportunities to advance clinicians' confidence in communicating empathically with members of diverse sexual orientation and gender identities. The training is poised for feasibility and efficacy testing.
Keywords: communication; health education; cancer communication; decision-making; experiences; transgender; lgbt; health equity; sexual and gender minorities; sgm; lgbtq+; chosen family; empathic
Journal Title: Healthcare (Switzerland)
Volume: 12
Issue: 24
ISSN: 2227-9032
Publisher: MDPI AG  
Date Published: 2024-12-02
Start Page: 2557
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001383844900001
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare12242557
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC11675140
PUBMED: 39765984
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- MSK corresponding author is William Rosa -- Source: Wos
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MSK Authors
  1. Smita Banerjee
    124 Banerjee
  2. Patricia Ann Parker
    91 Parker
  3. William   Rosa
    199 Rosa
  4. Mia Rose Behrens
    12 Behrens
  5. Meghan Mcdarby
    29 Mcdarby