Literature DB >> 27141931

Transforming Preprofessional Health Education Through Relationship-Centered Care and Narrative Medicine.

Tzipi Weiss1, Marci J Swede2.   

Abstract

ISSUE: The Institute of Medicine identified health care education reform as a key to improving the error prone, costly, and unsatisfying U.S. health care system. It called for health care education that no longer focuses exclusively on the mastery of technical skills but teaches students the human dimensions of care and develops their ability to collaborate with patients and colleagues to alleviate suffering and improve health. When should this educational reform begin, by what frameworks should it be guided, and which methods should it employ are important questions to explore. EVIDENCE: There is increasing evidence that practitioners' relational skills, such as empathy and reflection, improve patients' health outcomes. Efforts to shift education toward patient-centered care in interprofessional teams have been made at the professional level, most notably in medical schools. However, reform must begin at the preprofessional level, to start cultivation of the habits that support humane care as early as possible and protect against empathic decline and the development of counterproductive attitudes to collaboration. The conceptual basis for reform is offered by relationship-centered care (RCC), a framework that goes beyond patient-centered care and interprofessional teamwork to focus on the reciprocal human interactions at the micro, mezzo, and macro levels of care. RCC identifies practitioners' relationships with patients, colleagues, community, and self as the critical interpersonal dimensions of healthcare and describes a foundation of values, knowledge, and skills required for teaching each dimension. The teaching of these foundations can be facilitated with techniques from narrative medicine, a compatible care model that conceptualizes health care as a context in which humans exchange stories and thus require narrative competence. IMPLICATIONS: We suggest beginning the educational reform at the preprofessional level with the implementation of a formal curriculum based on the 4 RCC dimensions with students expected to gain beginner levels of competency on these dimensions in addition to evidence-based principles of health sciences. This requires interprofessional collaboration among health professions, social science, and liberal arts faculty and training of health professions faculty in narrative medicine. Next, we suggest engaging in incremental change in the organizational culture with professional development and team-building activities. Although we need systematic research on the efficacy of the components of the transformation, their impact on students' learning, and their costs, it is important to engage in efforts to prepare professionals who are able to respond to the complex health needs of individuals and society in the 21st century.

Entities:  

Keywords:  narrative medicine; preprofessional education; relationship centered care

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27141931     DOI: 10.1080/10401334.2016.1159566

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Teach Learn Med        ISSN: 1040-1334            Impact factor:   2.414


  7 in total

1.  Looking Back to Move Forward: First-Year Medical Students' Meta-Reflections on Their Narrative Portfolio Writings.

Authors:  Hetty Cunningham; Delphine Taylor; Urmi A Desai; Samuel C Quiah; Benjamin Kaplan; Lorraine Fei; Marina Catallozzi; Boyd Richards; Dorene F Balmer; Rita Charon
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 6.893

2.  The Student Navigator Project (SNaP): Preparing Students Through Longitudinal Learning.

Authors:  Reem Hasan; Rachel Caron; Hannah Kim; Gina M Phillipi; Tajwar Taher; Kanwarabijit Thind; Erin Urbanowicz
Journal:  Med Sci Educ       Date:  2020-04-25

3.  Learning from patients: trainers' use of narratives for learning and teaching.

Authors:  John R Skelton; Margaret O'Riordan; Anna Berenguera Ossȯ; Jackie Beavan; Katharine Weetman
Journal:  BJGP Open       Date:  2017-01-09

4.  -A cross-sectional study of clinical learning environments across four undergraduate programs using the undergraduate clinical education environment measure.

Authors:  Malin Sellberg; Per J Palmgren; Riitta Möller
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2021-05-05       Impact factor: 2.463

5.  The Clarion Call of the COVID-19 Pandemic: How Medical Education Can Mitigate Racial and Ethnic Disparities.

Authors:  Andrew D P Prince; Alexander R Green; David J Brown; Dana M Thompson; Enrique W Neblett; Cherie-Ann Nathan; John M Carethers; Rebekah E Gee; Larry D Gruppen; Rajesh S Mangrulkar; Michael J Brenner
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 7.840

6.  Journeying to the White Coat Ceremony: A description of the people, situations and experiences that inform student visions of the physician they hope to become.

Authors:  Rachel Ma Brown; Joe F Donaldson; Melissa D Warne-Griggs; Stephanie Bagby Stone; James D Campbell; Kimberly G Hoffman
Journal:  J Med Educ Curric Dev       Date:  2017-09-04

7.  Brazil's Community Health Workers Practicing Narrative Medicine: Patients' Perspectives.

Authors:  Rogério Meireles Pinto; Rahbel Rahman; Margareth Santos Zanchetta; W Galhego-Garcia
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2021-04-07       Impact factor: 5.128

  7 in total

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