Pediatric Residents’ Use of Jargon During Counseling About Newborn Genetic Screening Results

Author:

Farrell Michael1,Deuster Lindsay1,Donovan Jodi1,Christopher Stephanie1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Patient Care and Outcomes Research, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Abstract

OBJECTIVE. The goal was to investigate pediatric residents’ usage of jargon during discussions about positive newborn screening test results. METHODS. An explicit-criteria abstraction procedure was used to identify jargon usage and explanations in transcripts of encounters between residents and standardized parents of a fictitious infant found to carry cystic fibrosis or sickle cell hemoglobinopathy. Residents were recruited from a series of educational workshops on how to inform parents about positive newborn screening test results. The time lag from jargon words to explanations was measured by using “statements,” each of which contained 1 subject and 1 predicate. RESULTS. Duplicate abstraction revealed reliability κ of 0.92. The average number of unique jargon words per transcript was 20; the total jargon count was 72.3 words. There was an average of 7.5 jargon explanations per transcript, but the explained/total jargon ratio was only 0.17. When jargon was explained, the average time lag from the first usage to the explanation was 8.2 statements. CONCLUSION. The large number of jargon words and the small number of explanations suggest that physicians’ counseling about newborn screening may be too complex for some parents.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference43 articles.

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2. Farrell MH, Farrell PM. Newborn screening for cystic fibrosis: ensuring more good than harm. J Pediatr. 2003;143(6):707–712

3. Hampton ML. Sickle cell “nondisease”: a potentially serious public health problem. Am J Dis Child. 1974;128(1):58–61

4. Markel H. The stigma of disease: implications of genetic screening. Am J Med. 1992;93(2):209–215

5. Markel H. Scientific advances and social risks: historical perspectives of genetic screening programs for sickle cell disease, Tay-Sachs disease, neural tube defects, and Down syndrome, 1970–1997. In: Holtzman NA, Watson MS, eds. Promoting Safe and Effective Genetic Testing in the United States: Final Report of the Task Force on Genetic Testing. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press; 1998:161–176

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