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Related Concept Videos

Techniques of Therapeutic Communication II: Focusing, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing01:23

Techniques of Therapeutic Communication II: Focusing, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

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Focusing involves centering a conversation on a message's critical elements or concepts. Focusing is valuable if the talk is vague or patients begin to repeat themselves. Sometimes, when patients are asked about their symptoms, they may go off-topic and try to tell their entire life story. Respectfully, the nurse should bring the conversation back into focus.
This therapeutic technique can also be used when a patient brings up pertinent information during a health-related conversation. The...
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Therapeutic Communication01:30

Therapeutic Communication

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Communication is a lifelong learning process. Through therapeutic communication, nurses can collect relevant assessment data, provide education and counseling, and interact during nursing interventions. Sending and receiving messages occur through verbal and nonverbal communication techniques and can happen separately or simultaneously.
Verbal communication depends on language or a prescribed way of using words so that people can share information effectively. The critical aspects of verbal...
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Barriers to Effective Communication II01:21

Barriers to Effective Communication II

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The barriers to effective communication also include cultural barriers, semantic barriers, gender barriers, and time constraints.
Cultural barriers:
Differences in values, beliefs, religion, knowledge, and tradition can significantly impact communication. Awareness of nonverbal cues is critical, especially when conversing with a patient from a different culture. What appears appropriate in one culture may be inappropriate in another.
Semantic barriers:
As a result of their tendency to use...
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Barriers to Effective Communication I01:30

Barriers to Effective Communication I

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A communication barrier is any distortion or interruption during a conversation, resulting in miscommunication of the message. A good communicator should know these barriers and continuously check for the listener's understanding by obtaining feedback.
Communication barriers include the following:
Physiological barriers: They are limitations caused by a person's health condition or disability, such as hearing loss, poor eyesight, illness, or unconsciousness. An example to overcome this...
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Techniques of therapeutic communication I: Active Listening, Sharing Observations, Validation, and Using Touch01:15

Techniques of therapeutic communication I: Active Listening, Sharing Observations, Validation, and Using Touch

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The history of therapeutic communication can be traced back to Florence Nightingale, who emphasized the importance of developing trusting relationships with patients. She taught that the presence of nurses with patients results in therapeutic healing.
Therapeutic communication is not the same as social interaction. Social interaction has no goal or purpose and consists of casual information sharing, whereas therapeutic communication has a plan or purpose for the conversation. Therapeutic...
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Operant Conditioning Intervention01:24

Operant Conditioning Intervention

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Operant conditioning serves as a foundational principle in therapeutic interventions aimed at modifying maladaptive behaviors. Central to this approach is the notion that behaviors, both adaptive and maladaptive, are learned through reinforcement. By analyzing the environmental factors that reinforce problematic behaviors, clinicians can design interventions to weaken these reinforcements and replace maladaptive behaviors with healthier alternatives.
In operant conditioning, behaviors that are...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Mar 1, 2026

Rodent Brain Microinjection to Study Molecular Substrates of Motivated Behavior
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Enhanced Time Out: An Improved Communication Process.

Patricia E Nelson

    AORN Journal
    |May 31, 2017
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Enhanced time outs improve surgical safety by ensuring all team members verify patient information before procedures. This enhanced communication process prevents critical errors like wrong-site or wrong-patient surgery.

    Keywords:
    The Universal Protocolculture of safetysurgical safety checklisttime outwrong-site surgery

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    Area of Science:

    • Medical Safety
    • Surgical Procedures
    • Healthcare Communication

    Background:

    • Surgical errors such as wrong-site, wrong-procedure, or wrong-patient surgery remain a significant patient safety concern.
    • Existing safety protocols, including the World Health Organization's surgical safety checklist, aim to mitigate these risks.
    • Effective communication and teamwork among surgical staff are crucial for preventing errors.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To describe an enhanced time out protocol implemented to improve surgical safety.
    • To detail the mandatory participation and specific checklist responses required from all surgical team members.
    • To enhance communication and teamwork to prevent wrong-site, wrong-procedure, and wrong-patient surgeries.

    Main Methods:

    • Implementation of an enhanced time out procedure involving all surgical team members.
    • Mandatory participation of all personnel in the enhanced time out process.
    • Designated team members respond to specific elements on the surgical safety checklist during the enhanced time out.

    Main Results:

    • The enhanced time out expands upon the World Health Organization's surgical safety checklist measures.
    • Ensures all involved personnel conduct a final verification of relevant surgical information.
    • Aims to foster a highly reliable safety process through improved communication and teamwork.

    Conclusions:

    • The enhanced time out protocol is an improved communication process designed to prevent critical surgical errors.
    • Mandatory team participation and checklist adherence strengthen patient safety measures.
    • This initiative promotes better teamwork and communication, leading to a more reliable surgical safety process.