Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service

Objective - The study examined whether a prompt sheet improved the reference interview process for health information advisers working at NHS Direct, a 24 hour telephone helpline that provides confidential health care advice for the public in England. Method - A randomised control trial was cond...

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Main Authors: Toni Price, Christine Urquhart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2007-09-01
Series:Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/269
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spelling doaj-aee59eb8c8634a329e57310ab3a84f3a2020-11-24T21:48:59ZengUniversity of AlbertaEvidence Based Library and Information Practice1715-720X2007-09-012310.18438/B8S018Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline ServiceToni Price0Christine Urquhart1National Institute for Health and Clinical ExcellenceUniv Wales AberystwythObjective - The study examined whether a prompt sheet improved the reference interview process for health information advisers working at NHS Direct, a 24 hour telephone helpline that provides confidential health care advice for the public in England. Method - A randomised control trial was conducted at eight NHS Direct sites across England in 2003-04. Newly recruited health information advisers (n=30), full and part-time, were randomly allocated to a control group (n=15) or intervention group (n=15), and 26 completed the study. Existing health information advisers were involved in the planning and design of the intervention. The prompt sheet included prompts for demographic information, reason for call, condition/treatment plan, existing knowledge of caller, special needs of the caller, handling a call empathetically, conclusion. Testing of reference interview expertise was done at the end of basic training, and two months later, using the same ten test questions, that were based on common questions received by NHS Direct. A relevance framework for possible responses was drawn up for each question for scoring test responses, with more relevant responses scoring higher than less relevant responses. Results - The average score of prompt (experimental) and non-prompt (control) participants increased on the second test, for each of the 10 questions. The prompt group improved significantly more overall than the control group. There was variation within the groups. Sixteen health information assistants showed a net increase in their score over all ten questions (10 experimental group, six control group). The post-test score for an individual on a particular question did sometimes decrease from the pre-test score, but all 26 improved on at least one question. Previous call handler experience did not appear to influence the extent of improvement, but length and type of experience in the post may have an influence. Conclusion - The trial demonstrated the benefit of a simple and inexpensive prompt sheet for some, though not all, newly recruited health information advisers to improve their reference interview technique.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/269
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Toni Price
Christine Urquhart
spellingShingle Toni Price
Christine Urquhart
Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
author_facet Toni Price
Christine Urquhart
author_sort Toni Price
title Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service
title_short Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service
title_full Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service
title_fullStr Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service
title_full_unstemmed Using a Prompt Sheet to Improve the Reference Interview in a Health Telephone Helpline Service
title_sort using a prompt sheet to improve the reference interview in a health telephone helpline service
publisher University of Alberta
series Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
issn 1715-720X
publishDate 2007-09-01
description Objective - The study examined whether a prompt sheet improved the reference interview process for health information advisers working at NHS Direct, a 24 hour telephone helpline that provides confidential health care advice for the public in England. Method - A randomised control trial was conducted at eight NHS Direct sites across England in 2003-04. Newly recruited health information advisers (n=30), full and part-time, were randomly allocated to a control group (n=15) or intervention group (n=15), and 26 completed the study. Existing health information advisers were involved in the planning and design of the intervention. The prompt sheet included prompts for demographic information, reason for call, condition/treatment plan, existing knowledge of caller, special needs of the caller, handling a call empathetically, conclusion. Testing of reference interview expertise was done at the end of basic training, and two months later, using the same ten test questions, that were based on common questions received by NHS Direct. A relevance framework for possible responses was drawn up for each question for scoring test responses, with more relevant responses scoring higher than less relevant responses. Results - The average score of prompt (experimental) and non-prompt (control) participants increased on the second test, for each of the 10 questions. The prompt group improved significantly more overall than the control group. There was variation within the groups. Sixteen health information assistants showed a net increase in their score over all ten questions (10 experimental group, six control group). The post-test score for an individual on a particular question did sometimes decrease from the pre-test score, but all 26 improved on at least one question. Previous call handler experience did not appear to influence the extent of improvement, but length and type of experience in the post may have an influence. Conclusion - The trial demonstrated the benefit of a simple and inexpensive prompt sheet for some, though not all, newly recruited health information advisers to improve their reference interview technique.
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/269
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