Literature DB >> 29059072

Teaching Medical Students to Communicate With Empathy and Clarity Using Improvisation.

Evonne Kaplan-Liss1, Valeri Lantz-Gefroh, Elizabeth Bass, Deirdre Killebrew, Nicholas M Ponzio, Christine Savi, Christine O'Connell.   

Abstract

PROBLEM: Medical educators widely accept that health care providers need strong communication skills. The authors sought to develop a course incorporating improvisation to teach health professions students communication skills and build empathy. APPROACH: Teaching health care professionals to communicate more effectively with patients, the public, and each other is a goal of the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science at Stony Brook University. The authors designed an interprofessional elective for medical, nursing, and dental students that differed in several respects from traditional communication training. The Communicating Science elective, which was offered by the Alda Center from 2012 to 2016, used verbal and nonverbal exercises, role-playing, and storytelling, including improvisation exercises, to teach students to communicate with empathy and clarity. OUTCOMES: In course evaluations completed by 76 students in 2012 and 2013, 100% said they would recommend the course to fellow students, saw the relevance of the course content to their careers, and desired more of the course content in their school's curriculum. As a result of this positive feedback, from 2014 to 2016, 10 hours of instruction pairing empathy and communication training was embedded in the preclinical curriculum at the Stony Brook University School of Medicine. NEXT STEPS: This course could be an effective model, and one that other institutions could employ, for improving communication skills and empathy in the next generation of health care professionals. Next steps include advocating for communication skills training to be embedded throughout the curriculum of a four-year medical school program.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29059072     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002031

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  14 in total

1.  An Applied Improvisational Pharmacy Communication Workshop Implemented During Orientation for First-Year Pharmacy Students.

Authors:  Erin E Donovan; Laura E Brown; Sharon K Rush; Mackenzie R Greenwell; Billy Table; Yaguang Zhu; Kyle D Kearns
Journal:  Am J Pharm Educ       Date:  2020-01       Impact factor: 2.047

2.  Improvisation in the Time of a Pandemic: Field Notes on Resilience.

Authors:  Ankit Mehta; David Fessell
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2022-02

3.  Medical Improvisation Training for all Medical Students: 3-Year Experience.

Authors:  David Fessell; Erin McKean; Heather Wagenschutz; Michael Cole; Sally A Santen; Robert Cermak; Katie Zurales; Stephanie Kukora; Valeri Lantz-Gefroh; Evonne Kaplan-Liss; Alan Alda
Journal:  Med Sci Educ       Date:  2019-12-09

4.  Improv: Transforming Physicians and Medicine.

Authors:  Ankit Mehta; Belinda Fu; Erica Chou; Suzanne Mitchell; David Fessell
Journal:  Med Sci Educ       Date:  2020-12-01

5.  Thermo in the Time of COVID-19: Using Improvisation to Foster Discussion and Translating the Experience to Online Learning.

Authors:  Erin Lavik
Journal:  Biomed Eng Educ       Date:  2020-09-02

6.  Development of an empathy and clarity rating scale to measure the effect of medical improv on end-of-first-year OCSE performance: a pilot study.

Authors:  Carol A Terregino; H Liesel Copeland; Suzanne C Sarfaty; Valeri Lantz-Gefroh; Krista Hoffmann-Longtin
Journal:  Med Educ Online       Date:  2019-12

7.  Does watching a movie improve empathy? A cluster randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Azin Ahmadzadeh; Mehdi Nasr Esfahani; Masoud Ahmadzad-Asl; Mohammadreza Shalbafan; Seyed Vahid Shariat
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2019-11-28

8.  Improvisation as a Teaching Tool for Improving Oral Communication Skills in Premedical and Pre-Biomedical Graduate Students.

Authors:  Marianne Phelps; Catrina White; Lin Xiang; Hollie I Swanson
Journal:  J Med Educ Curric Dev       Date:  2021-04-18

9.  Improvement of the management of mental well-being and empathy in Chinese medical students: a randomized controlled study.

Authors:  Rong Rong; Wei Chen; Zihao Dai; Jingli Gu; Weiying Chen; Yanbin Zhou; Ming Kuang; Haipeng Xiao
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2021-07-10       Impact factor: 2.463

10.  Empathy Enhancement Based on a Semiotics Training Program: A Longitudinal Study in Peruvian Medical Students.

Authors:  Lissett J Fernández-Rodríguez; Víctor H Bardales-Zuta; Montserrat San-Martín; Roberto C Delgado Bolton; Luis Vivanco
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2020-10-29
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