Communication Process
Active Listening Skills
Therapeutic Communication
Personal Communication Barriers
Physical Communication Barriers
100

This is the person who encodes, or gives, information

The sender

100

Good listeners should avoid this, which can show lack of interest

Interrupting

100

This type of patient centered communication looks at the patient as a person

Patient centered communication

100

This type of barrier can occur within either participant in communication due to emotions, attitudes, or prejudices

Personal barrier

100

For deaf patients, healthcare workers who know this has an advantage in communicating better

Sign language

200

This is the person who decides, or accepts, information

The receiver

200

Instead of thinking ahead for a response, active listeners should do this

Paying attention

200

When communicating therapeutically, healthcare workers should primarily use these types of questions

Open-ended questions

200

This is when people hear only what they want to hear

Selective comprehension

200

When communicating with a patient in a wheelchair, it is respectful for the healthcare worker to do this

Be seated or at the same level

300

This is the information that is being communicated

The message

300

Maintaining this shows interest and engagement in the conversation

Eye contact

300

Healthcare workers should avoid asking this type of question, as it can be judgmental

"Why" questions

300

This is an attitude of indifference that can create barriers

Complacency

300

Aphasia and Dysarthria are examples of challenges with this

Speech

400

This is the response given by the receiver that confirms the original message was received properly

Feedback

400

Ignoring these by moving to a quiet place improves active listening

Distractions

400

This is what healthcare workers should introduce at the start of a conversation with a patient

Yourself (Your Name)

400

These are similar to prejudice but are typically directed toward a single person

Preconceptions

400

For blind patients, healthcare workers should announce their presence and describe these as they are happening

Procedures

500

This refers to the receiver's experiences and values, which influence how they decode a message

Frame of reference

500

Actively listening involves trying to ignore these personal barriers

Personal prejudices

500

This guideline advises healthcare workers to allow patients to do this

To ask questions and discuss their concerns and feelings

500

When people are preoccupied with their own problems or day-dreaming, this can create a communication barrier

Self-absorption

500

Being very ill, in physical pain, or on strong medication can affect a patient's ability to do this clearly

Communicate

M
e
n
u