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Communicating Deployment-Related Health Concerns to Patients

One of the more commonly addressed issues of patient-clinician interaction is the skill with which physicians communicate bad news to patients. Probably more common for most physicians, however, is the need to effectively convey reassuring information when the available medical evaluation suggests the absence of a catastrophic or rapidly progressive problem. This process is known as risk communication. It is the science of communicating information about risk under circumstances involving some combination of low trust, high concern, perceived crisis, or differential interpersonal power.

Nearly all clinicians regularly encounter patients under conditions of high concern, low trust, perceived crisis or differential interpersonal power. Clinicians can learn to improve their capacity for effective doctor-patient communication about risk, disease, and prognosis from the burgeoning literature on risk communication.

We've gathered a few documents that we hope will help you learn how to effectively communicate deployment-related health concerns to patients. The guidance is offered in several different formats (Microsoft Word and Adobe Portable Document Format or PDF) so you can choose the one most useful for your situation. Please consult our Help & FAQs page if you encounter any problems with these downloads.

  • Risk Communication for Clinicians. This briefing covers the use of risk communication principles in a clinical setting to improve communication between health care providers and patients, especially in situations involving patients with high levels of concern and low trust. The briefing defines risk communication, explains how it can improve clinical care, and offers tools to help clinicians communicate more effectively.

    [PPT 1.00MB]

  • Clinical Risk Communication: Explaining Causality to Gulf War Veterans with Chronic Multisymptom Illnesses. LTC (Dr.) Charles Engel of the Department of Defense's Deployment Health Clinical Center introduces the topic of clinical risk communication. He uses a basic illustrative model that borrows from signal theory. The approach should help clinicians develop an increased sensitivity to the ways that patients decide about risk.

    [DOC 144KB]  [PDF 77KB]

  • Tips When Caring for Soldiers with Deployment-Related Health Concerns. Using a role-playing approach, this paper explores the first and second line considerations for a clinician when a patient thinks he may have a deployment-related condition.

    [DOC 43KB]  [PDF 23KB]

  • When the Doctor and Patient Don't See Eye to Eye. Learn how to handle the struggle that develops between the patient and the clinician when the patient is feeling uncertain and anxious.

    [DOC 43KB]  [PDF 9KB]

  • Risk Communication: A Neglected Tool in Protecting Public Health. A June 2003 publication from the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis.

    [Link to Article]

  • Risk Communication: A Lecture by Dr. John H. Marburger. Dr. Marburger, Science Advisor to the President, discusses his implementation of a comprehensive risk communication strategy used to rehabilitate the relationship of the Brookhaven National Laboratory to the neighboring community following its designation as a EPA Superfund Site.

    [Link to Article]

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Major Depression In Adults For Mental Health Care

Hypnotize Away Pain

Researchers Study Needle-Free Anthrax Vaccine

Smallpox Vaccine

Certain Symptoms May Predict Fatal Foodborne Botulism

Researchers Discover Three Compounds that Inhibit Anthrax Toxins

Inhaled Anthrax Vaccine In The Works

Reintegration Roadmap

Soldiers Donate Blood for Anthrax Treatment

Alaskas Post-Traumatic Stress Cases Increasing

Employment Retention After Moderate-Severe Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) in The British Army 1989-98

Suicides Surge In Japans Military

DoD Assists CDC With Anthrax Plasma Project

New Malaria Drug Promises To Be Cheaper

Drug Could Boost Malaria Fight

Military Helps Soldiers Deal With Mental Scars Of Combat

30-40 Percent of Israeli Conscripts Request Psychological Help

Communication Problems Often Initiate Cascades of Errors

Protective Gene May Enhance Vaccine Responses

Navy Works on Developing Vaccine for Food-Borne Illnesses

Argentine Falkland Veterans Plagued by Suicide

DOD Task Force Report on Care for Victims of Sexual Assault

A Troubling Return for Iraq Vets

Vaccine Protects Mice Against Ricin

Combat Involvement Raises Risk Of Developing Mental Illness

Stress Harms Ability to Fight Stress

An American in Sparta

Air Force Program Aims to Nip Combat Stress in the Bud

Aloe Vera May Save Lives on Battlefield

Navy Top Doc Talks Preventive Medicine

Pneumonia Again Hits Troops in Middle East

Soldiers Trained to Kill, Not to Cope

Induction of Protective Immunity against Lethal Anthrax Challenge with a Patch

Drug Uptake and Modulation of Drug Resistance in Leishmania by an Aquaglyceroporin

New Report Outlines Steps Needed To Lessen Smallpox Threat

The Invisible Wound

Review of the CDC Smallpox Vaccination Program Implementation

Food-Borne Illnesses from Local Restaurants in Iraq

Smallpox Response Plan and Guidelines (Version 3.0)

Evaluate a Rash Illness Suspicious for Smallpox

1 in 8 Returning Soldiers Suffers From PTSD

Detection of SARS-associated Coronavirus in Throat Wash and Saliva in Early Diagnosis

Bird Flu Growing More Deadly, Study Finds

Malaria Epidemics and Surveillance Systems in Canada

SARS Control and Psychological Effects of Quarantine, Toronto, Canada

Keeping Up with Agent Orange

New SARS Vaccine Shows Promising Results

Mutational analysis of methionine adenosyltransferase from Leishmania donovani

VA Alerts Doctors to Malaria-Drug Concerns

ACINETOBACTER, DRUG RESISTANT - USA EX IRAQ ALERT

Gulf war veteran blames vaccines

Wound Dressings Catch on with U.S. Military

Modified Vaccinia Ankara--Potential as an Alternative Smallpox Vaccine

Pilot Study to Probe Cardiac Effects of Smallpox Vaccine

10 years of Gulf War Veteran Medical Evaluations

Posttraumatic Stress, Fibromyalgia Linked

Disaster Planning Drills and Readiness Assessment

Malaria-Drug Diagnosis for GI Accused of Cowardice

Wounded in Iraq, Soldier Starts Over

7 Servicemembers Likely Ill From Malaria Drug

Vaccine Critics Attack Mercury Report

Use of Psychiatric and Medical Health Care by Veterans With Severe Mental Illness

Disaster Mass Burial May Be Unnecessary

DMZ Troops Take Steps to Avoid Malaria

Cellular and Humoral Immune Abnormalities in Gulf War Veterans

Pentagon Gulf War Illness Data Wrong

Innovative Self healing Bandage to Help Diabetics

Vaccine Protects Mice Against Airborne Pox Virus

Harmful Side Effects of Lariam

50 Years Later, The Tragedy of Nuclear Tests in Nevada

Abuse At Iraqi Prison Predictable, Decades-Old Study Shows

Lecture Series Addresses Replacing Lost Limbs

AFIP Experts Provide Rapid Leishmaniasis Diagnosis in Soldiers Deployed to Iraq

The Smallpox Vaccine and Coronary Artery Disease

Patient Beliefs May Determine Success of Depression Care

Updated: 9/2/2004
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