Why Doctor Communication Skills Matter So Much
Communication failures in healthcare have consequences that extend far beyond patient dissatisfaction. Research consistently shows that poor doctor communication skills are linked to missed diagnoses, medication errors, reduced treatment adherence, increased litigation, and patient safety incidents. When a patient complains to the GMC, the complaint is frequently not about the clinical decision itself — it is about how it was communicated.
Good Medical Practice 2024 requires doctors to communicate effectively with patients, colleagues, and employers. This includes listening to patients, sharing information in a way they can understand, involving them in decisions about their care, and being open when things go wrong. The GMC treats communication as a domain of professional practice — not an optional addition to clinical competence.
In fitness to practise proceedings, a doctor who made a clinical error but communicated honestly and compassionately will almost always face a better outcome than one who made the same error and communicated poorly. How you communicate is assessed alongside what you do clinically.
The Five Dimensions of Doctor Communication Skills
Active listening is the foundation of effective doctor communication. This means giving the patient your full attention, allowing them to complete their sentences, acknowledging their concerns before responding, and asking clarifying questions. Research shows that doctors interrupt patients within an average of 18 seconds. The doctor who listens first diagnoses better, builds trust faster, and generates fewer complaints.
Patients do not retain medical jargon. Effective communication means explaining diagnoses, treatment options, and risks in plain language, checking understanding, and inviting questions. The "teach-back" method — asking the patient to explain back what you have told them — is one of the most evidence-based techniques for ensuring comprehension.
Good Medical Practice 2024 requires doctors to involve patients in decisions about their care. This means presenting options, explaining the benefits and risks of each, respecting the patient's values and preferences, and supporting their right to make informed choices — even when those choices differ from your clinical recommendation.
Communication is not just about patients. Clear, respectful communication with colleagues — including effective handover, accurate documentation, constructive feedback, and professional conduct in team settings — is a professional obligation. Good Medical Practice 2024 strengthens the requirements around working in multidisciplinary teams and addressing unprofessional behaviour.
The duty of candour requires you to communicate openly and honestly with patients when something goes wrong with their care. This is arguably the most difficult communication any doctor faces — and one of the most important. How you handle this conversation can determine the outcome of your entire career.
Practical Techniques to Improve Doctor Communication Skills
- Use the Calgary-Cambridge model — a structured approach to the consultation that covers initiating the session, gathering information, providing structure, building the relationship, and closing the session
- Practice the teach-back method — after explaining something, ask the patient to tell you in their own words what they understand. This identifies gaps without embarrassing the patient
- Record and review your consultations — with appropriate consent, recording consultations and reviewing them is one of the most effective ways to identify communication habits you may not be aware of
- Seek feedback from patients — patient feedback questionnaires provide structured insight into how your communication is perceived
- Complete communication-focused CPD — structured courses on communication, ethics, and professionalism provide both learning and documented evidence for your appraisal portfolio
- Practise empathic statements — "I can see this is worrying for you" or "That must have been difficult" are simple phrases that patients consistently identify as making them feel heard
The best communicators in medicine are not those who explain the most — they are those who listen the most. Every patient complaint about communication contains a lesson. The doctors who learn from them are the ones who improve.
Courses for Doctor Communication and Professionalism
CPD Courses for Communication and Professionalism

- ✓ Ethics and Ethical Standards for Doctors Enrol Now →
- ✓ Professionalism for Doctors Enrol Now →
- ✓ Professionalism in Documentation Enrol Now →
- ✓ Courses for Doctors (GMC) Enrol Now →
- ✓ Courses for Nurses & Midwives (NMC) Enrol Now →
- ✓ Courses for Dentists (GDC) Enrol Now →
- ✓ Courses for Pharmacists (GPhC) Enrol Now →
- ✓ Courses for Health Professionals (HCPC) Enrol Now →
- ✓ Courses for Opticians, Chiropractors & Osteopaths Enrol Now →
Communication in Fitness to Practise Proceedings
If you are facing a fitness to practise investigation where communication is part of the concern, demonstrating that you have engaged with communication skills development is critical. This means completing relevant CPD, addressing communication specifically in your reflective statement, and being able to articulate what you have learned and how your communication has changed.
Panels assess communication directly — both through the evidence you present and through how you conduct yourself at the hearing. A doctor who demonstrates insight through clear, honest, and reflective communication at the hearing itself is demonstrating the very competence the panel is assessing.

Certified by CPD UK — all courses provide a verifiable certificate accepted as remediation evidence across all UK healthcare regulators.
Invest in the Skill That Prevents Most Complaints
Communication failures drive more patient complaints than clinical errors. Our CPD courses help you strengthen both your communication and your professional portfolio.
See Courses for Doctors →Frequently Asked Questions
Why are doctor communication skills important?
Poor communication is consistently among the top reasons for patient complaints, GMC referrals, and adverse fitness to practise outcomes. Good Medical Practice 2024 treats communication as a core professional competency, not an optional skill.
Can poor communication lead to a GMC investigation?
Yes. Communication failures — including failure to explain treatment options, not listening to patient concerns, poor handover, and inadequate documentation — can trigger complaints that lead to GMC investigation and fitness to practise proceedings.
How can I evidence improved communication to the GMC?
Through CPD certificates in communication and professionalism courses, patient feedback data, reflective writing that addresses communication specifically, and supervisor reports that confirm improved communication in practice.
What communication model should doctors use?
The Calgary-Cambridge model is widely recommended for structuring consultations. It covers initiating the session, gathering information, building the relationship, providing structure, explanation and planning, and closing the session.
Does communication training count as CPD?
Yes. Communication skills training, including CPD-accredited courses in ethics, professionalism, and patient communication, counts towards your CPD requirements and provides documented evidence for your appraisal and revalidation portfolio.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or professional regulatory advice. If you are facing a fitness to practise investigation, seek independent legal advice from a specialist regulatory solicitor and contact your medical defence organisation or professional indemnity provider without delay.