Health Coaching (3) Flashcards
Describe the four principles of motivational interviewing
- Engaging
• Building connection + rapport - Focusing
• Helping to identify a health behaviour-related goal - Evoking
• Supporting patients to explore their situation further ‘change talk’ - Planning
• Supporting patients to identify possible options/opportunities/resources
How can we use health coaching and motivational interviewing concepts to help focus and set effective goals
SMART goals • Specific (well defined and clear) • Measurable (measure progress towards goal) • Achievable • Realistic (relevant to context) • Timely (clear timeline towards goal)
Effective goals also take into account
• How important goal is to the patient
• How motivated the patient is
• How the goal aligns with the patient’s values and situation
• The degree to which achieving the goal is under the patient’s control
identify both the overall goal that they would like to work towards, and also their goal for their conversation with you.
useful questions to help set goals and explore motivation
What is the issue?
What makes this an issue now?
What is important to you about this issue?
How motivated are you to address this issue?
What part will be most useful to focus on in the next x minutes?
What do you want ideally? Often, people will come with an issue which they convert into what they think is a goal.
Problem and alternative to statement “ I want to lead a healthy lifestyle”
It is too vague
Help the patient shape it into something more specific. You could ask: What does ‘healthy’ mean for you? What would it look like and feel like if you achieved this goal? What would other people notice?
Problem and alternative to statement “I don’t want to eat junk food any more “
The goal is phrased in a way that is moving away from something (i.e. eating junk food) rather than towards something
Help the patient rephrase this into something they can work towards. This will help them to visualise it and develop motivation to achieve it. You could ask: What do you want instead?
Problem and alternative to statement “I want my partner to cook healthier food for me “
The goal is about a third party-in this case the partner of the patient
It is worth reminding the patient that unfortunately we don’t have their partner in the room to work on and we can’t make them behave in a different way. You could ask: What part of this is within your control?
Do Goals change?
yes - goals can evolve over time.
- can even happen during the coaching conversation itself, as the patient reflects more on their issues, motivators, values and context- which may also be changing and evolving over time.
- You may need to re-visit a patient’s goals more than once and perhaps several times in your conversations, as the patient continues to develop clarity about what they really want to achieve- which may be very different from their original goal.
Which type of questions are used in health coaching?
- open, solution-oriented questions–> to help to explore the patient’s thoughts and feelings about their issue and to explore meaning, values and goals.
–> lead to overall ideal outcome and a more specific goal for the consultation
eg.
What do you want to be happening ideally with your diet?
If you did manage that, what would be happening instead?
What does eating better look like for you?
So with that in mind, what would be the most useful use of our time here?
Which 3 factors allow us to shape a goal during a consultation
Questions
ideal outcome
patients foussed goal
core skills of coaching
Open questions Affirmations Reflecting Summarising Pausing
fully present, listen actively and non-judgmentally
What is “rolling with resistance”
if there is resistance during consultation use this approach:
- involves expressing empathy, emphasising the patient’s autonomy, avoiding arguing and advice-giving, and instead drawing on the core skills of coaching to create trust and work collaboratively with the patient, strengthening their belief in their capacity to change.
Role of language in health coaching conversations
- immediate and powerful impact on mood and motivation.
- The language that patients themselves use is as important as the language of the practitioner.
- encourage and reinforce positive language (e.g. change talk) rather than negative language used by the patient, to maximise the motivation to change.
- ensuring your own wording is expressed positively and that your questions encourage the patient to express their reasons for wanting to make a change rather than focusing only on their reasons for maintaining the status quo.
What are some useful questions to help explore the current situation (including perceived capability for behaviour change), begin to evoke ‘change talk’ and increase motivation?
What is stopping you from achieving your ideal outcome?
What needs to happen for this change to become possible?
What part of this do you have control over?
What would be different and better for you if you make this change?
How will you know when you are ready to make the change?
What is going right?
Imagine you are your own best friend. What do you say to yourself about this issue?
How to use change talk in health coaching and its benefits
- listening actively,
- reinforces the patient’s own positive ‘change talk’.
- invite the patient to identify the areas they can influence and change.
- reflecting back their thoughts on what they have heard and affirming the patient’s motivation to change their health behaviour
skills of reflection, summarising and affirmations
- -> help reinforce any change talk
- -> support the patient to strengthen their motivation and confidence.
- -> helping the patient to identify possible options, opportunities and resources available to help them address their goal, including addressing what might get in the way.
When should you contribute your ideas and how?
after patient starts using positive change talk
- capture verbally, write a list or spider diagram ect..