Song Hee Park, Chan Woong Kim, Myeong Namgung, Young Gyu Kwon, Mi Kyung Kim
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Delivering Bad News in Clinical Performance Examinations: Medical Students' Delivery of an Advanced Cancer Diagnosis and Standardized Patients' Responses.
This paper examines how medical students deliver diagnostic information in the context of bad news and how standardized patients (individuals trained to portray patient roles based on case scenarios) respond. Using conversation analysis, we analyze 82 video-recorded consultations from a clinical performance examination at a university in Korea. We identify two distinct ways in which medical students deliver a stage IV colon cancer diagnosis. First, students may name the diagnosis without explicating the underlying evidence, simply referring to prior tests as the basis for the diagnosis. Second, students may explicate the evidence before naming the diagnosis, delivering the information in a stepwise manner. Standardized patients often problematize the first delivery method, treating the absence of evidence explication as "missing" - even though their scenario does not require them to do so. In contrast, they do not criticize the second method. This variation in standardized patients' responses can help identify aspects of students' delivery practices that warrant further reflection. The findings offer insights for improving communication training in bad news delivery and extend conversation analytic research on simulated interactions.
期刊介绍:
As an outlet for scholarly intercourse between medical and social sciences, this noteworthy journal seeks to improve practical communication between caregivers and patients and between institutions and the public. Outstanding editorial board members and contributors from both medical and social science arenas collaborate to meet the challenges inherent in this goal. Although most inclusions are data-based, the journal also publishes pedagogical, methodological, theoretical, and applied articles using both quantitative or qualitative methods.