Clinical meaning
The clinician integrates advanced therapeutic communication into prescriptive practice, informed consent, shared decision-making, interprofessional communication, and system-level communication quality improvement. Shared decision-making (SDM) is the gold standard for treatment decisions: the clinician shares evidence-based information about treatment options (benefits, risks, alternatives, outcomes), the patient shares their values, preferences, and goals, and together they make a treatment decision. SDM is ethically required (patient autonomy), clinically effective (improved adherence and outcomes), and legally protective (informed consent). The clinician conducts informed consent conversations that go beyond legalistic disclosure to true patient understanding: assess decisional capacity (ability to understand, appreciate, reason, and communicate), present information in accessible language, discuss alternatives including no treatment, explore the patient's values and how they apply to the decision, verify understanding through teach-back, and document the process. Health literacy-informed communication: 36% of US adults have limited health literacy, affecting understanding of medical information, medication labels, consent forms, and self-management instructions. The clinician uses plain language (below 6th-grade reading level), visual aids, limited information per session (chunk and check), teach-back verification, and health literacy screening (Newest Vital Sign or REALM). The clinician also leads interprofessional communication: SBAR for clinical handoffs, TeamSTEPPS for team communication, CUS (Concerned, Uncomfortable, Safety issue) for escalating safety concerns, and closed-loop communication for critical orders.