| Literature DB >> 35957650 |
Cynthia E Schairer1,2, Jenna Tutjer1, Christopher Cannavino1,3, William C Mobley1,4, Lisa Eyler1,5, Cinnamon S Bloss1,2,5.
Abstract
Compassion in interactions between physicians and patients can have a therapeutic effect independent of the technical medical treatment provided. However, training physicians to effectively communicate compassion is challenging. This study explores how medical students experienced training focused on interacting with patients by examining students' reports of particularly memorable lessons. Six focus groups were conducted with medical students (total n = 48) in their fourth year of training. We report on responses from students to the question, "What was the most memorable lesson you have learned about interacting with patients?" Students discussed lessons aimed at patient-centered physical navigation, interpersonal navigation, and perspective taking. Concerns were raised that navigation techniques felt inauthentic and that perspective taking was too time consuming to be sustainable in actual practice. While perspective-taking exercises should motivate medical students to treat every patient with dignity by demonstrating the complexity of others' lives, if students assume that full understanding is a prerequisite to delivery of compassionate care, they may dismiss explicit techniques of patient-centered care as inauthentic and perceive compassion and efficiency as mutually exclusive.Entities:
Keywords: compassionate care; focus group research; navigation techniques; perspective taking; undergraduate medical education
Year: 2022 PMID: 35957650 PMCID: PMC9358344 DOI: 10.1177/23743735221117383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Exp ISSN: 2374-3735
Demographic Characteristics of Focus Group Participants and Their Medical School Cohort.
| Demographic Trait | Study Participants (n = 48) | Full Fourth-Year Cohort (n = 127) |
|---|---|---|
|
| 60.4% (29) Female/ 39.5% (19) Male | 52% Female/ 48% Male |
|
| 27 years | 28 years |
|
| 24–34 years | 24–45 years |
|
| Internal Med., 25% (12) | Internal Med., 21.3% |
|
| 62.5% (30) | 87.4%a |
|
| ||
| “White” or “Caucasian” | 35.4% (17) | 40.9% |
| “Asian,” “Chinese,” or “Korean” | 29.2% (14) | 25.1%b |
| “South Asian” or “Indian” | 14.6% (7) | 13.4%c |
| “Hispanic” or “Mexican American” | 6.3% (3) | 7.1% |
| Unique Descriptions | 14.6% (7)d | -- |
In medical school data, the question was “Did either of your parents go to medical school?” and the proportion who responded “no” is given.
Labeled as “Asian Chinese,” “Asian Japanese,” “Asian Korean,” “Asian Vietnamese,” or “Asian Other” in medical school data.
Labeled as “Asian Indian” in medical school data.
Includes Black, Arab, or mixed ancestry; comparable data not are calculable for the full cohort.
Summary of Types of Lessons About Interacting With Patients Shared by Focus Group Participants.
| Lesson Type | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Managing objects and bodies (sitting/standing, touch, draping, specula positioning, computer terminal location) Narrating actions |
|
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How to run a visit (timing, history taking, shared medical decision making) How to speak and relate to patients (managing emotions, approaching patients, accessible language) |
|
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Understanding patient's experience and social determinants of health Acknowledging personal/cognitive limitations (bias, responses to time pressure) |
|
| Grouping | Label | Definition | Coding Rules |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Time | Discussions of time management, efficiency, time constraints, etc. | Code entire story | |
| Grades | Discussion of evaluation, testing, grades, etc. | Code entire story | |
| Variation | Narratives that suggest inconsistencies or variations across contexts (such as between preclinical and clinical; between rotations/attendings; between simulation and reality); includes differences in expectations | Code entire story | |
| MD Identity | Discussions of feeling like a doctor, what it means to be a doctor, or what kind of doctor someone wants to be. Also include discussions of choosing specialities and discussions of developing one's own clinical style. | Code entire story | |
| Emotions | Discussions of managing, coping with, expressing,
understanding, coming to terms with emotions (of self or
other). Include discussion of debriefing and vulnerability;
Include discussions of | Code entire story | |
| Humanity | Discussions of seeing the patient as a person, understanding
their background or social history, and any mentions of the
concept of humanity. Include discussions of
| Code entire story | |
| Tech Topics | Topics of interest to the Center for Technology and Empathy: Discussions of and answers to questions about medical technologies (include patient generated data AND hyperliterate patients, genomics, AI, telephone translators, and telemedicine) | Code entire section of focus group discussion devoted to these topics | |
|
| |||
| Observations | Discussion of lessons or experiences in the clinic that are learned through watching others | Code whole story | |
| Coaching | Discussions of lessons learned in clinical work but through direct coaching from another person (i.e., walking through epic templates or deliberate debriefing) | Code whole story | |
| Lecture | Discussions of lessons learned in lectures or didactic formats | Code whole story | |
| PBL | "Practice based learning”—Discussions of lessons learned through interactive learning, including role playing, simulated patient work, and visits from patient representatives | Code whole story | |
| Specialties | All specific mentions of specialties | Code only the word | |
|
| |||
| Interaction Techniques | Discussions of specific techniques for managing patient encounters including how to talk to a patient, make eye contact, timing, etc. Also include managing objects in the room such as drapes, speculums, computer screens/terminals, etc. | Code specific technique in the shortest number of words possible, ideally a sentence | |
| Lessons—Individual | Lessons or strategies that individuals may apply when facing challenges in practice | Code specific lesson in the shortest number of words possible, ideally a sentence | |
| Lessons—Institutional | Ideas for how UCSD SoM can improve training for students (include reports of other institutions) | Code specific idea in the shortest number of words possible, ideally a sentence |