Neeral K Sheth, Adam B Wilson, James C West, David C Schilling, Sandy H Rhee, T Celeste Napier
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: Substance use disorder (SUD) continues to be one of the most stigmatized and under-treated conditions in the United States. Stigmatizing language used by healthcare workers can transmit bias to others within healthcare, including medical trainees. This study investigates how stigmatizing language and undergraduate medical education (UME) curricula may influence trainees' clinical decision-making for patients with SUD.
Methods: Medical students from three Chicago-area medical schools were randomized to review either a stigmatizing or neutral version of a clinical scenario describing a patient experiencing opioid withdrawal. Participants (a) selected treatment plans for the fictional patient using two multiple-choice questions, (b) completed the Medical Condition Regard Scale (MCRS) to assess their attitudes, and (c) reported prior SUD experiences, both curricular and personal. Statistical analyses explored whether treatment decisions were influenced by attitudes, addiction medicine curricula, and exposure to the stigmatizing vignette.
Results: Among the 366 medical students who completed this study, exposure to stigmatizing language (n = 191) led to clinical decision-making that would be less effective in treating opioid withdrawal for the fictional patient (p = 0.027; η2 = 0.013). Exposure to more SUD education during UME was correlated with more effective clinical decision-making for opioid withdrawal (β = 0.181; R2 = 0.033; p < 0.001) but was not correlated with attitudes toward patients with SUD (p = 0.231).
Conclusions: Stigmatizing language influences clinical decision-making when treating patients with SUD. Improving SUD education within UME may be an effective strategy for mitigating this effect within medical trainees.
期刊介绍:
Academic Psychiatry is the international journal of the American Association of Chairs of Departments of Psychiatry, American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training, Association for Academic Psychiatry, and Association of Directors of Medical Student Education in Psychiatry.
Academic Psychiatry publishes original, scholarly work in psychiatry and the behavioral sciences that focuses on innovative education, academic leadership, and advocacy.
The scope of the journal includes work that furthers knowledge and stimulates evidence-based advances in academic psychiatry in the following domains: education and training, leadership and administration, career and professional development, ethics and professionalism, and health and well-being.