二维死亡?加拿大一所医学院临床前辅导案例中病人死亡的话语分析。

IF 2.1 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Paula Cameron, Victoria Luong, Olga Kits, Wendy A Stewart, Sarah Burm, Stephen Miller, Simon Field, Anna MacLeod
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:在本科医学教育(UGME)中,死亡的前景无处不在,但却很少直接涉及。尽管人们呼吁大学本科医学教育课程解决死亡和临终的复杂社会和情感方面的问题,但大多数课程侧重于生物医学、法律和后勤方面,或将这些主题集中在姑息治疗内容和/或模拟病人和人体模型中。我们的目标是在二维模拟(即案例启发式学习(CIL)中使用的基于文本的案例)中探索死亡和临终的复杂性,为死亡教育学术研究添砖加瓦。方法:我们进行了批判性话语分析,探索死亡和濒死是如何在一所医学院的正式、计划课程中被话语构建的。我们采用了两种方法:(1)文件分析:我们开发了一个模板来分析 127 个案例中关于死亡和临终的话语构建;(2)纵向访谈:我们对 12 名医科学生进行了半结构化访谈,在整个医学课程期间每年进行两次(共 92 次访谈)。我们对数据进行了集体分析,关注每个案例的形式、内容和目的是如何对死亡和临终进行话语建构的。研究结果本科生实习前案例教学课程中共包含 127 个辅导案例。在 5 个(4%)以病人死亡为特征的案例中,死亡和临终被话语建构为:(1) 可预测的;(2) 可预测的;(3) 可预测的:(1)可预测;(2)情节设置;(3)警示故事;(4)尾声;(5)深思熟虑;(6)缺席。很少有案例在标题、学习目标或问题中突出死亡和濒死,即使有,也是以生物医学事实或结果为框架。只有一个案例允许对病人的死亡和临终进行细致、深入和开放式的讨论,但其时间安排妨碍了有意义的参与。这种对死亡复杂性的轻描淡写被学生认为是错失良机,因为他们的临床实习迫在眉睫,他们渴望与导师和其他教学人员详细讨论这个话题。讨论:死亡往往是 CIL 课程中明显的缺失。在少数以病人死亡为主要特征的案例中,多重话语被调动起来,共同将死亡构建为发生在其他地方、核心课程参数之外的事情。换句话说,死亡在案例中或在未来的某个地方发生了--可预见的、缓慢的、作为达到目的的一种手段和道德失范的结果--但并不是主要的关注点。为了在CIL中加深对这些主题的理解,我们鼓励医学教育者通过考虑这些病例的形式、内容、目的和时间来关注病人死亡的表现。结论:将精心制作的病例融入课程具有巨大的潜力。我们建议,以病人死亡为特色的细致入微的病例,加上充足的讨论、反思和讲故事的空间和时间,可能有助于弥补正规 UGME 临床前课程在处理死亡和濒死方面的不足。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Two-Dimensional Deaths? A Discourse Analysis of Patient Death in Preclinical Tutorial Cases at a Canadian Medical School.

Introduction: The prospect of death is everywhere, but seldom directly addressed, in undergraduate medical education (UGME). Despite calls for UGME curricula to address the complex social and emotional aspects of death and dying, most curricula focus on biomedical, legal, and logistical aspects, or concentrate these topics within palliative care content and/or in simulations with simulated patients and manikins. We aimed to add to death education scholarship by exploring the complexities of death and dying within two dimensional simulations-i.e., in the text-based cases used in Case-Informed-Learning (CIL). Method: We conducted a critical discourse analysis exploring how death and dying were discursively constructed in the formal, planned curriculum at one medical school. We used two methods: (1) Document Analysis: We developed a template to analyze 127 cases regarding their discursive constructions of death and dying; (2) Longitudinal Interviewing: We conducted semi-structured interviews with a cohort of 12 medical students, twice annually throughout their medical program (total 92 interviews). We collectively analyzed data, attuning to how the format, content, and purpose of each case discursively constructed death and dying. Results: There were 127 tutorial cases included in the undergraduate, pre-clerkship case-informed curriculum. In the five (4%) cases featuring a patient who dies, death and dying were discursively constructed as: (1) predictable; (2) a plot device; (3) a cautionary tale; (4) an epilogue; (5) deliberate and careful; and (6) an absence. Very few cases highlighted death and dying in their titles, learning objectives, or questions, and where it did feature, it was framed a biomedical fact or outcome. Only one case allowed for a nuanced, in-depth and open-ended discussion of patient death and dying, but it was scheduled at a time that prevented meaningful engagement. This glossing over the complexities of death was identified as a missed opportunity by students, who, as their clinical placements loomed, were eager to broach this topic in detail with tutors and other teaching faculty. Discussion: Death was often a conspicuous absence in this CIL curriculum. In the few cases that featured the death of the main patient character, multiple discourses were mobilized that worked together to construct death as something that happens elsewhere, outside the parameters of core curriculum. In other words, death happens-predictably, slowly, as a means to an end and the result of moral failures, in the case or somewhere in the future-but was not the primary concern. To deepen engagement with these subjects in CIL, we encourage medical educators to attend to representations of patient death by considering the format, content, purpose, and timing of these cases. Conclusion: Carefully rendered cases thoughtfully embedded in the curriculum offer tremendous potential. We suggest nuanced cases featuring patient death, with plenty of space and time for discussion, reflection, and storytelling may help address gaps in formal UGME preclinical curricula addressing death and dying.

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来源期刊
Teaching and Learning in Medicine
Teaching and Learning in Medicine 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
12.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Teaching and Learning in Medicine ( TLM) is an international, forum for scholarship on teaching and learning in the health professions. Its international scope reflects the common challenge faced by all medical educators: fostering the development of capable, well-rounded, and continuous learners prepared to practice in a complex, high-stakes, and ever-changing clinical environment. TLM''s contributors and readership comprise behavioral scientists and health care practitioners, signaling the value of integrating diverse perspectives into a comprehensive understanding of learning and performance. The journal seeks to provide the theoretical foundations and practical analysis needed for effective educational decision making in such areas as admissions, instructional design and delivery, performance assessment, remediation, technology-assisted instruction, diversity management, and faculty development, among others. TLM''s scope includes all levels of medical education, from premedical to postgraduate and continuing medical education, with articles published in the following categories:
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