| Literature DB >> 32293416 |
Subha Perni1, Lauren R Pollack2, Wendy C Gonzalez3, Elizabeth Dzeng4, Matthew R Baldwin5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Moral distress is a reason for burnout in healthcare professionals, but the clinical settings in which moral distress is most often experienced by medical students, and whether moral distress is associated with burnout and career choices in medical students is unknown. We assessed moral distress in medical students while caring for older patients, and examined associations with burnout and interest in geriatrics.Entities:
Keywords: Burnout; Education medical; Geriatrics; Moral distress; Surveys and questionnaires
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32293416 PMCID: PMC7092500 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-1980-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
The 12 clinical scenarios experienced by medical students during the major clinical year that may invoke moral distress
| Scenario Number | Scenario Prompta |
|---|---|
| 1 | Following the family’s wishes to continue life support even though I felt it was not in the best interest of the elderly patient. |
| 2 | Administration of life-extending therapy to an elderly patient even though I felt it was futile or harmful. |
| 3 | Administration of tests or treatments that I felt would be unlikely to benefit an elderly patient (e.g. daily labs, cancer screening). |
| 4 | Performance of painful procedures on elderly patients by trainees in order to increase skill level. |
| 5 | Felt that an elderly patient’s capacity to make medical decisions was incorrectly assessed. |
| 6 | Use of physical or pharmacologic restraints for an elderly patient that I felt to be unwarranted. |
| 7 | Avoidance of communication with an elderly patient because communication was made more difficult by disability (e.g. cognitive impairment, difficulty hearing, difficulty seeing, speech impairment). |
| 8 | Lack of concern for the bodily privacy of an older patient. |
| 9 | Felt that the wishes of an elderly person regarding end-of-life care had not been asked in a timely or appropriate manner. |
| 10 | Felt that an elderly patient’s prognosis was not adequately communicated. |
| 11 | Felt that a hospitalized elderly patient did not have the financial resources or social support to adequately care for him or herself after discharge. |
| 12 | Witnessed ageist remarks or attitudes from the health care team about an elderly patient. |
aScenarios 1,2,3,4,8,9, and 10 were adapted from the Moral Distress Scale (25)
Medical student characteristics by tertile of composite moral distress score
| Characteristics | All | Lowest Tertilea of Composite Moral Distress | Middle Tertilea of Composite Moral Distress | Highest Tertilea of Composite Moral Distress | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year in Medical School | 199 | < 0.01 | ||||
Mid-Major Clinical Year(n, %) | 57 (29%) | 38 (62%) | 18 (26%) | 1 (1%) | ||
Post-Major Clinical Year (n, %) | 142 (71%) | 23 (38%) | 51 (74%) | 68 (99%) | ||
| Age (median, IQR) | 197 | 26 (25–28) | 26 (24–27) | 26 (25–27) | 27 (25–28) | 0.08 |
| Female gender (n, %) | 205 | 121 (59%) | 33 (49%) | 40 (58%) | 48 (71%) | 0.03 |
| Race/Ethnicity (n, %) | 202 | 0.90 | ||||
| Non-Hispanic White | 122 (60%) | 38 (56%) | 40 (60%) | 44 (66%) | ||
| Non-Hispanic Black | 12 (6%) | 4 (6%) | 4 (6%) | 4 (6%) | ||
| Hispanic | 17 (8%) | 7 (10%) | 6 (9%) | 4 (6%) | ||
| East Asian | 26 (13%) | 10 (15%) | 9 (13%) | 7 (11%) | ||
| Indian Subcontinent | 10 (5%) | 2 (3%) | 3 (4%) | 5 (7%) | ||
| Other | 15 (7%) | 7 (10%) | 5 (7%) | 3 (5%) | ||
| Religion is moderately or very important in daily life (n, %) | 205 | 50 (24%) | 16 (24%) | 19 (28%) | 15 (22%) | 0.74 |
| Experience caring for older adults in a clinical setting | 209 | < 0.01 | ||||
| Little or none (n, %) | 51 (24%) | 26 (37%) | 17 (24%) | 8 (12%) | ||
| Some (n, %) | 135 (65%) | 40 (57%) | 46 (66%) | 49 (71%) | ||
| A lot (n, %) | 23 (11%) | 4 (6%) | 7 (10%) | 12 (17%) | ||
| Present for hospitalization of elderly relative (n, %) | 209 | 124 (59%) | 35 (50%) | 45 (64%) | 44 (64%) | 0.15 |
| Very close relationship with elderly relatives or non-relatives (n, %) | 198 | 78 (39%) | 25 (38%) | 26 (39%) | 27 (41%) | 0.94 |
| UCLA Geriatrics Attitude Scale Score (median, IQR) (range 1–5, 5 most positive) | 208 | 3.7 (3.4–4.0) | 3.6 (3.1–3.9) | 3.7 (3.4–4.0) | 3.8 (3.4–4.1) | 0.05 |
aTertile 1 ranges from 0 to 11 (n = 70), tertile 2 ranges from 18 to 35 (n = 70), tertile 3 ranges from 36 to 95, (n = 69)
Scenario characteristics reported by medical student respondents (n = 209)
| Scenarios | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Encountered the scenario, (n, %) | 131 (63%) | 114 (55%) | 128 (61%) | 79 (38%) | 70 (33%) | 29 (14%) | 110 (53%) | 54 (26%) | 100 (48%) | 103 (49%) | 122 (58%) | 58 (28%) |
| Experienced moral distress in response to scenarioa, (n, %) | 125 (95%) | 106 (93%) | 106 (83%) | 68 (86%) | 67 (96%) | 29 (100%) | 99 (90%) | 51 (94%) | 97 (97%) | 96 (93%) | 118 (97%) | 50 (86%) |
| Score among all, median (IQR) | 5 (3–6) | 5 (3–6) | 3 (2–5) | 5 (4–7) | 6 (5–7) | 6 (4–7) | 5 (3–6) | 5 (4–7) | 5 (4–7) | 6 (5–7) | 6 (5–8) | 6 (3–6) |
| Score among distressed, median (IQR) | 5 (3–6) | 5 (4–6) | 4 (2–5) | 5 (4–7) | 6 (5–7) | 6 (4–7) | 5 (3–6) | 5 (4–7) | 6 (4–7) | 6 (5–7) | 6 (5–8) | 6 (4–7) |
| Rotation experienced on which scenario most commonly experiencedb | Med (90%) | Med (91%) | Med (93%) | Med (84%) | Surg (67%) | Med (76%) | Med (78%) | Med (83%) | Med (96%) | Med (87%) | Med (56%) | Med (81%) |
| Neuro (37%) | Neuro (39%) | Neuro (39%) | Surg (43%) | Med (56%) | Neuro (45%) | Neuro (59%) | Surg (67%) | Neuro (44%) | Surg (61%) | Neuro (39%) | Surg (59%) | |
| Surg (26%) | Surg (39%) | Surg (32%) | Neuro (30%) | Neuro (39%) | Surg (24%) | Surg (50%) | Neuro (52%) | Surg (44%) | Neuro (49%) | Surg (33%) | Neuro (48%) | |
| Gyn (26%) | ||||||||||||
| Setting in which scenario most commonly experiencedb | ICU (76%) | Wards (68%) | Wards (89%) | Wards (92%) | Wards (99%) | Wards (83%) | Wards (97%) | Wards (96%) | Wards (95%) | Wards (94%) | Wards (100%) | Wards (98%) |
| Wards (56%) | ICU (66%) | ICU (38%) | ICU (29%) | ICU (19%) | ICU (31%) | ICU (34%) | ICU (46%) | ICU (44%) | ICU (47%) | ICU (24%) | ICU (34%) | |
| Out-patient (2%) | Out-patient (4%) | Out-patient (19%) | Out-patient (10%) | Out-patient (11%) | Out-patient (19%) | Out-patient (15%) | Out-patient (25%) | Out-patient (27%) | Out-patient (31%) |
aDenominator is number who encountered the scenario
bPercentages do not add to 100% because the choices were not mutually exclusive
Fig. 1a Percent (number) of respondents reporting burnout by composite moral distress score tertile. b Percent (number) of respondents reporting interest in geriatric career paths by composite moral distress score tertile. Tertile 1 scores 0–17 (n = 70), tertile 2 score (18–35) (n = 70), and tertile 3 scores 36–95 (n = 69). Burnout is defined using the abbreviated Maslach burnout inventory definition [26]