试点研究:为研究生交流技能培训制定可扩展的干预措施。

IF 1.1 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Palliative medicine reports Pub Date : 2024-08-01 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1089/pmr.2024.0006
Warren Lewin, Helen James, Nikolina Mizdrak, Ben Kaasa, Shira A Strauss, J Thomas Toguri
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:沟通技巧是行医的基础,建议通过培训培养沟通技巧。在研究生培训中,重病沟通技巧(SICSs)的教学并不连贯,而且很少,住院医师报告称,他们在进行困难对话时感到训练不足。作者开发了一个电子模块,展示了一个已知循证培训项目中的高产沟通技巧,以规范核心 SICS 教学,并质疑在技能练习前使用该模块如何影响住院医师完成预先护理计划 (ACP) 的舒适度和准备程度:加拿大多伦多一家学术医院的全科住院医师完成了一个新颖的电子模块,该模块取代了介绍与 ACP 对话相关的核心 SICS 的典型说教课程。然后,住院医师对这些技能进行讨论,然后在经过培训的主持人的反馈下,在结构化的角色扮演模拟中有意识地练习这些技能。住院医师完成了干预前后的态度调查:结果:住院医生更喜欢多种学习方式的结合,并欢迎在线和虚拟教学方法来学习 SICS。住院医师表示,干预后,他们在参与 ACP、发布重大新闻和讨论护理目标方面的准备程度更高。住院医师在干预后对讨论 ACP 表现出了更大的兴趣,但对在繁忙的门诊中这样做的可行性提出了质疑:结论:需要可扩展、省时的教学策略来填补已知的教育空白。这项研究表明,将简短的电子模块学习纳入住院医师准备 SICS 培训的刻意练习模拟训练中是有好处的。在线互动虚拟培训提高了住院医师对 ACP 的准备程度和舒适度,而这一领域在医学教育中往往被忽视。此外,它还为临床教师提供了一种循证的标准化工具,可将其无缝融入教学实践中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pilot Study: Moving Towards a Scalable Intervention for Postgraduate Communication Skills Training.

Background: Communication skills are foundational to the practice of medicine and training to build them is recommended. Serious illness communication skills (SICSs) teaching is inconsistently and sparsely taught in postgraduate training and residents report feeling inadequately trained to have difficult conversations. The authors developed an e-module demonstrating high-yield communication skills from a known evidence-based training program to standardize core SICS teaching and questioned how using it before skills practice impacted comfort and preparedness for residents to complete advance care planning (ACP).

Methods: Family medicine residents at an academic hospital in Toronto, Canada, completed a novel e-module that replaced a typical didactic-lecture introducing core SICS relevant to ACP conversations. Residents then discussed the skills, followed by practicing them deliberately in a structured role-play simulation with feedback by trained facilitators. Residents completed pre- and post-intervention attitudinal surveys.

Results: Residents preferred a combination of learning modalities and welcomed online and virtual teaching methods for learning SICS. Residents reported higher levels of preparedness for engaging in ACP, delivering serious news, and discussing goals of care post-intervention. Residents showed more interest in discussing ACP post-intervention but questioned feasibility for doing so in busy ambulatory clinics.

Conclusion: Scalable time-efficient teaching strategies are needed to fill a known education gap. This study demonstrated benefits of incorporating brief e-module learning into residents' preparation for SICS training using deliberate practice simulation training. The online, interactive virtual training improved resident readiness and comfort for ACP, an area often overlooked in medical education. Moreover, it provides an evidence-informed standardized tool for clinician teachers to seamlessly incorporate into their teaching practices.

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