AIMS: To study the development of patient relation skills, as used during interviews with patients for health problems that are common within their specialty, in family medicine residents during the third year of their residency program. METHODS: Quasi-experimental (before-after), national-level, multicenter study. The participants were 193 third-year residents in family medicine at 8 training units who were trained between 1996 and 1999. During this period all residents participated in the usual training and clinical activities included in the National Plan for this specialty. The GATHA-RES questionnaire was used to evaluated six clinical scenarios in video recordings of encounters with standardized patients (3 at the start of the third year and 3 at the end of the third year). Descriptive, bivariate and multivariate statistical analyses were used. RESULTS: A total of 1,024 interviews were analyzed. The time spent with each patient decreased significantly at the end of the residency program; the duration of the visit was directly proportional to the score on the GATHA-RES questionnaire (p < 0.05). Improvements were seen in formal and organizational aspects of the interview. In contrast, skills related with the exploration of personal and contextual aspects of the problem, and negotiating skills, were worse at the end of the study. The variables that best predicted residents' communicational profile were age (inverse relation), duration of the interview, training of the tutor in clinical interviewing, and teaching unit. CONCLUSIONS: Residents learn to shorten the duration of the visit to the detriment of communication skills that are basic to appropriate care for their patients' health problems. These results suggest the need for substantial changes in the training of family medicine residents in Spain.
AIMS: To study the development of patient relation skills, as used during interviews with patients for health problems that are common within their specialty, in family medicine residents during the third year of their residency program. METHODS: Quasi-experimental (before-after), national-level, multicenter study. The participants were 193 third-year residents in family medicine at 8 training units who were trained between 1996 and 1999. During this period all residents participated in the usual training and clinical activities included in the National Plan for this specialty. The GATHA-RES questionnaire was used to evaluated six clinical scenarios in video recordings of encounters with standardized patients (3 at the start of the third year and 3 at the end of the third year). Descriptive, bivariate and multivariate statistical analyses were used. RESULTS: A total of 1,024 interviews were analyzed. The time spent with each patient decreased significantly at the end of the residency program; the duration of the visit was directly proportional to the score on the GATHA-RES questionnaire (p < 0.05). Improvements were seen in formal and organizational aspects of the interview. In contrast, skills related with the exploration of personal and contextual aspects of the problem, and negotiating skills, were worse at the end of the study. The variables that best predicted residents' communicational profile were age (inverse relation), duration of the interview, training of the tutor in clinical interviewing, and teaching unit. CONCLUSIONS: Residents learn to shorten the duration of the visit to the detriment of communication skills that are basic to appropriate care for their patients' health problems. These results suggest the need for substantial changes in the training of family medicine residents in Spain.
Authors: David Paniagua Urbano; Luis Ángel Pérula de Torres; Roger Ruiz del Moral; Enrique Gavilán Moral Journal: Aten Primaria Date: 2010-02-02 Impact factor: 1.137
Authors: Enrique Gavilán Moral; Roger Ruiz Moral; Luis Angel Perula de Torres; Juan Manuel Parras Rejano Journal: Aten Primaria Date: 2009-09-25 Impact factor: 1.137
Authors: Francisco Javier Valverde Bolívar; Miguel Pedregal González; María Francisca Pérez Fuentes; María Dolores Alcalde Molina; Jesús Torío Durántez; Miguel Delgado Rodríguez Journal: Aten Primaria Date: 2016-05-05 Impact factor: 1.137