| Literature DB >> 31853484 |
Marie José Aires1, Rémi Gagnayre1, Olivia Gross1, Cam-Anh Khau2, Sophie Haghighi2, Alain Mercier2, Yannick Ruelle2, Claire Marchand1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient teachers were involved in training general practice residents (GPRs) to strengthen the patient-centered approach. They teach a course on health democracy by themselves and teach in tandem with a physician teacher during reflective practice-based classes (named GEPRIs). We present the GPRs' representations of patient teacher characteristics and capacities and their perception of how useful patient teachers are to their professional development.Entities:
Keywords: general practice resident; health democracy; medical education; patient engagement; patient teacher
Year: 2018 PMID: 31853484 PMCID: PMC6908989 DOI: 10.1177/2374373518803630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Exp ISSN: 2374-3735
Change in the Residents’ Representations on Patient Teacher’s Characteristics After Their Involvement.a,b
| Regarding Patient Teacher’s Characteristics | Agree Before, n (%) | Agree After, n (%) | Difference, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The PT is knowledgeable about health-care legislation | 52 (47) | 89 (80) | 37 (33) |
| The PT belongs to the organizational network | 81 (73) | 105 (95) | 24 (22) |
| The PT has complete legitimacy in this training to train general practice residents | 53 (48) | 73 (66) | 20 (18) |
| The patient is a salaried association employee | 36 (32) | 55 (50) | 19 (17) |
| The PT is a patient activist | 71 (64) | 89 (80) | 18 (16) |
| The patient has knowledge about health-care resources that could be useful to me | 73 (66) | 89 (80) | 16 (14) |
| The PT has “scientific” knowledge about his illness | 66 (59) | 82 (74) | 16 (14) |
| The PT is a partner in care | 76 (68) | 89 (80) | 13 (12) |
| The PT has training in teaching | 41 (37) | 54 (49) | 13 (12) |
| The patient has knowledge about the health-care system | 85 (77) | 98 (88) | 13 (12) |
| The PT is an expert in his illness | 75 (68) | 84 (76) | 9 (8) |
| The PT participates in accordance with the same educational values as the physician educators | 42 (38) | 50 (45) | 8 (7) |
| The PT is a patient who has identified dysfunction in the management of chronic illnesses | 75 (68) | 82 (74) | 7 (6) |
| The patient is user representative | 73 (66) | 81 (73) | 8 (7) |
| The PT has knowledge related to his experience of his illness | 103 (93) | 109 (98) | 6 (5) |
| The PT is a patient motivated to teach | 84 (76) | 90 (81) | 6 (5) |
| The PT is a patient motivated to increase his own knowledge | 84 (76) | 89 (80) | 5 (5) |
| The PT wants to improve the quality of diagnostic care | 53 (48) | 58 (52) | 5 (5) |
| The PT wants to improve the quality of therapeutic care | 86 (77) | 88 (79) | 2 (2) |
| The PT is a patient motivated to discover the teaching of medical students | 86 (77) | 87 (78) | 1 (1) |
| The PT has a chronic illness | 92 (83) | 93 (84) | 1 (1) |
| The PT wants to improve the quality of the caregiver–patient relationship | 101 (91) | 102 (92) | 1 (1) |
| The PT wants to improve the quality of preventive care | 83 (75) | 83 (75) | 0 (0) |
Abbreviation: PT, patient teacher.
a N = 111.
b Agreement includes both “agree” and “strongly agree” responses.
Change in the Residents’ Representations on Patient Teacher’s Capacities After Their Involvement.a,b
| Regarding Patient Teacher’s Capacities | Agree Before, n (%) | Agree After, n (%) | Difference, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| He is capable of explaining health democracy issues | 60 (54) | 80 (72) | 20 (18) |
| He is capable of conveying scientific knowledge about his illness | 48 (43) | 64 (58) | 16 (14) |
| He is capable of being objective about his own illness | 63 (57) | 78 (70) | 15 (14) |
| He is capable of participating in the assessment (comarking the written work from reflective practice groups) of residents in the general practice training program | 43 (39) | 57 (51) | 14 (13) |
| He is capable of cofacilitating a reflective practice group with a physician educator | 75 (68) | 87 (78) | 12 (11) |
| He is capable of conveying health-care ethics–related knowledge | 85 (77) | 94 (85) | 9 (8) |
| He is capable of discretion (professional secrecy) | 88 (79) | 95 (86) | 7 (6) |
| He is capable of participating in solving problems related to the situations presented | 74 (67) | 81 (73) | 7 (6) |
| Aside from cofacilitating reflective practices groups, he is capable of leading the general practice training course by himself | 37 (33) | 43 (39) | 6 (5) |
| He is capable of deciding the right time to intervene in the discussion during reflective practice groups | 88 (79) | 93 (84) | 5 (5) |
| He is capable of conveying patient rights–related knowledge | 95 (86) | 101 (91) | 6 (5) |
| He is capable of reflecting the community of chronically ill patients | 79 (71) | 82 (74) | 3 (3) |
| He is capable of adapting his discourse to the residents | 73 (66) | 76 (68) | 3 (3) |
| He is capable of drawing connections between the clinical situations presented and his knowledge and experience | 91 (82) | 94 (85) | 3 (3) |
| He is capable of understanding medical language | 75 (68) | 77 (69) | 2 (2) |
| He is capable of staying in his role as patient when conveying his personal point of view | 85 (77) | 87 (78) | 2 (2) |
| He is capable of conveying knowledge related to the experience of his illness | 103 (93) | 103 (93) | 0 (0) |
| He is capable of controlling his own emotions | 84 (76) | 84 (76) | 0 (0) |
| He is capable of listening and showing empathy | 95 (86) | 95 (86) | 0 (0) |
| He is capable of adapting his intervention to the behavior and attitudes of the general practice residents | 82 (74) | 79 (71) | −3 (−3) |
a N = 111.
b Agreement includes both “agree” and “strongly agree” responses.
General Practice Residents’ Perceptions of Patient Teacher Utility in the Training Program.a,b
| Patient Teacher’s Involvement Is Useful for: | Agree, n (%) |
|---|---|
| Better understanding the experience of the illness | 102 (92) |
| Better knowledge of the patient organization setting | 101 (91) |
| Providing knowledge about users’ rights | 98 (88) |
| Identifying psychosocial problems related to managing patients with chronic illness | 90 (81) |
| Better understanding health-care ethics | 89 (80) |
| Overall, I would say that the patient teacher’s involvement is useful in the general practice training | 86 (77) |
| Better understanding the reasons for treatment noncompliance | 85 (77) |
| Changing my views about the patient’s role in the health-care system | 77 (69) |
| Better understanding health democracy issues | 72 (65) |
| Acquiring new medical skills | 46 (41) |
| Better understanding the clinical problems presented in the reflective practice groups | 41 (37) |
a N = 111.
b Agreement includes both “agree” and “strongly agree” responses.
General Practice Residents’ Sense of Competence Concerning the Acquisition of Patient Perspective–Related Competencies and Patient Teacher’s Contribution to Developing Those Competencies.a,b
| Regarding Patient Perspective-Related Competencies | As a Result of the General Practice Instruction, I Feel Capable of: | I Would Rate the Patient Teacher’s Contribution to the Development of This Competency: |
|---|---|---|
| Agree, n (%) | Large or Very Large, n (%) | |
| Taking the patient’s point of view into account | 103 (93) | 83 (75) |
| Understanding the patient care pathway | 101 (91) | 81 (73) |
| Understanding what the patient feels | 100 (90) | 80 (72) |
| Taking the patient’s rights into account | 91 (82) | 78 (70) |
| Including patient organizations in the coordination of care | 69 (62) | 76 (68) |
| Taking the patient’s knowledge and experience into account during my consultations | 98 (88) | 71 (64) |
| Building a therapeutic relationship with the patient | 101 (91) | 69 (62) |
| Informing and advising the patient | 98 (88) | 67 (60) |
| Including an ethical dimension in patient care | 98 (88) | 66 (59) |
| Conducting a shared medical decision-making process with the patient | 97 (87) | 62 (56) |
| Helping the patient develop skills for managing his illness | 88 (79) | 62 (56) |
| Communicating appropriately with the patient | 99 (89) | 59 (53) |
| Treating a patient as a whole | 99 (89) | 58 (52) |
| Taking the entourage (peer helpers) into account when making medical decisions | 90 (81) | 52 (47) |
a N = 111.
b Agreement corresponds to both “agree” and “strongly agree” responses.