Motivational interviewing and colorectal cancer screening: A peek from the inside out

TitleMotivational interviewing and colorectal cancer screening: A peek from the inside out
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsWahab, S, Menon, U, Szalacha, L
JournalPatient Education and Counseling
Volume72
Pagination210-217
Date PublishedAug
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number0738-3991 (Print)0738-3991 (Linking)
Accession Number18467066
Keywords*Motivation, Clinical Competence, Colonoscopy/psychology, Colorectal Neoplasms/*diagnosis, Communication, Cooperative Behavior, Directive Counseling/methods, Health Promotion/methods, Humans, Interviews as Topic/*methods, Longitudinal Studies, Mass Screening/nursing/*psychology/utilization, Patient Acceptance of Health Care/*psychology/statistics & numerical data, Patient Education as Topic/*methods, Primary Health Care, Professional Role/psychology, Professional-Patient Relations, Program Development, Research Design, Self Efficacy, Social Support, Telephone
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This article focuses on design, training, and delivery of motivational interview (MI) in a longitudinal randomized controlled trial intended to assess the efficacy of two separate interventions designed to increase colorectal screening when compared to a usual care, control group. One intervention was a single-session, telephone-based MI, created to increase colorectal cancer screening within primary care populations. The other was tailored health counseling. We present the rationale, design, and process discussions of the one-time motivational interviewing telephone intervention. We discuss in this paper the training and supervision of study interventionists, in order to enhance practice and research knowledge concerned with fidelity issues in motivational interview interventions. METHODS: To improve motivational interviewing proficiency and effectiveness, we developed a prescribed training program adapting MI to a telephone counseling session. RESULTS: The three interventionists trained in MI demonstrate some MI proficiency assessed by the motivational interviewing treatment integrity scale. In the post-intervention interview, 20.5% of the MI participants reported having had a CRC screening test, and another 19.75% (n=16) had scheduled a screening test. Almost half of the participants (43%) indicated that the phone conversation helped them to overcome the reasons why they had not had a screening test. CONCLUSIONS: Ongoing supervision and training (post-MI workshop) are crucial to supporting MI fidelity. The trajectory of learning MI demonstrated by the interventionists is consistent with the eight stages of learning MI. The MI road map created for the interventionists has shown to be more of a distraction than a facilitator in the delivery of the telephone intervention. MI can, however, be considered a useful tool for health education and warrants further study. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: MI training should include consistent training and process evaluation. MI can, however, be considered a useful tool for health education and warrants further study. MI can also be adapted to diverse health promotion scenarios.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=18467066
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