| Literature DB >> 29132340 |
Kazuko Arai1,2, Takuya Saiki3, Rintaro Imafuku3, Chihiro Kawakami3, Kazuhiko Fujisaki3, Yasuyuki Suzuki3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: How medical residents' experiences with care for dying patients affect their emotional well-being, their learning outcomes, and the formation of their professional identities is not fully understood. We examine residents' emotional states and learning occurring during the provision of care to dying patients and specifically discuss the impact of providing end-of-life (EOL) care on professional identity formation.Entities:
Keywords: Dying patients; Emotion; End-of-life care; Experiential learning; Residents
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29132340 PMCID: PMC5683338 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-017-1029-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Participants
| Code | Gender | Age ranges | Years of clinical experience |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | M | Thirties | 4 |
| b | F | Twenties | 4 |
| c | M | Twenties | 3 |
| d | M | Thirties | 5 |
| e | F | Twenties | 4 |
| f | F | Twenties | 5 |
| g | M | Twenties | 4 |
| h | M | Thirties | 3 |
| i | M | Thirties | 5 |
| j | F | Thirties | 5 |
| k | M | Twenties | 5 |
| l | M | Twenties | 3 |
| m | F | Forties | 4 |
Interview guide
| Question items | Kolb’s ELT | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Which dying patients left the biggest impression on you? What treatment/care was provided, and how did you feel when you were treating the patient? | Experience / Reflection |
| 2 | How did you feel when the patient passed away? | |
| 3 | Did you receive advice or support from the attending physician and other medical staff when you were treating the patient? | |
| 4 | What do you think will be important when you treat a similar patient in the future? | Conceptualization/Planning |
| 5 | How would you like to support residents and students when you become an attending physician? |
ELT experiential learning theory
Residents’ perceptions of caring for dying patients
| Theme | Kolb’s ELT | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| I. Mixed feelings associated with providing care for dying patients | |||
| 1 | Dilemmas in confronting the reality of medical uncertainty | Experience | |
| 2 | Disrupted self-efficacy due to miscommunication in stressful situations | ||
| 3 | Feelings of guilt and powerlessness both as a person and as a doctor | ||
| II. Reflections on the experience of providing care for dying patients | |||
| 1 | The importance of facing patients’, families’ and one’s own emotions | Reflection | |
| 2 | Broadening of perspectives from individual communication to inter-professional communication | ||
| 3 | Renewed awareness from a disease-oriented cure to a palliative care-oriented treatment of pain relief | ||
| III. Rebuilding awareness for EOL care | |||
| 1 | A desire for communication that anticipates the future of patients and patients’ families and patient-centered care | Conceptualization/Planning | |
| 2 | Self-awareness of professional identity and the desire to continually develop skills | ||
EOL end-of-life
Suggested implications for attending physicians in EOL care to promote residents’ experiential learning
| Attending physicians in EOL care should… | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Teach residents skills to handle uncertainty, contradictions, and limitations in medicine |
| 2 | Establish an explicit learning opportunity that allows residents to communicate with multidisciplinary team members |
| 3 | Recognize that they themselves are viewed as role models |
| 4 | Pay attention to residents’ emotional status and offer words of affirmation |
| 5 | Take various approaches to promoting residents’ deep reflection on their experiences |
| 6 | Respect the autonomy of residents and share responsibilities to develop their professional identity |
EOL end-of-life