倾听病人的故事:在一个大规模的虚拟平台上使用医学人文学科来提高临床医生的参与度。

Brianna Rossiter, Amy Farkas, Christine Kolehmainen, Melissa McNeil, Sarah Merriam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:倦怠和脱离在初级保健从业人员(pcp)中很常见,特别是那些在退伍军人健康管理局提供妇女保健的人。COVID-19大流行迫使向虚拟医疗的转变加剧了这一问题,这也可能影响临床医生的流失、医患关系,并最终影响患者的健康。观察:参与医学人文学科的医生有更多的同理心和更少的倦怠感。为了提高照顾女性退伍军人的pcp的满意度和参与度,实施了这一大规模、虚拟的、跨专业的叙事医学活动,以更深入地了解部署对女性退伍军人的影响,描述女性退伍军人在部署后面临的社会和情感挑战,并确定支持退伍军人重返社会的策略。这种医疗媒体的新颖使用导致了高出席率(bb800人)和参与度(> 1700条独特的聊天消息,> 80条自发回复)。研究结果表明,临床医生的评价可能会发生变化,并对医患关系产生积极影响。结论:医学人文干预在大规模虚拟实施中是可行的。本课程展示了成功利用女性退伍军人的故事来展示积极的临床影响,广泛的参与、参与和参与者满意度证明了这一点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hearing Patient Stories: Use of Medical Humanities on a Large-Scale, Virtual Platform to Improve Clinician Engagement.

Background: Burnout and disengagement are common among primary care practitioners (PCPs), particularly those who provide women's health care at the Veterans Health Administration. The shift to virtual care forced by the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated this issue, which may also impact clinician attrition, the patient-clinician relationship, and ultimately, patient health.

Observations: Physicians who participate in the medical humanities have more empathy and experience less burnout. To improve satisfaction and engagement among PCPs who care for women veterans, this large-scale, virtual, interprofessional narrative medicine event was implemented to gain a deeper appreciation of the impact of deployments on women veterans, describe the social and emotional challenges faced by women veterans postdeployment, and identify strategies to support veterans during reintegration. This novel use of medical media resulted in high attendance (> 800 participants) and engagement (> 1700 unique chat messages, with > 80 spontaneous replies). Findings suggest a potential shift in clinician appreciation and a positive impact on the patient-clinician relationship.

Conclusions: Medical humanities interventions are feasible on a large-scale virtual implementation. This curriculum demonstrates the successful utilization of women veterans' stories for demonstrating a positive clinician impact as evidenced by the extensive participation, engagement, and participant satisfaction.

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