住院医师早期培训中患者死亡经历的影响:一项定性研究。

CMAJ open Pub Date : 2023-10-31 Print Date: 2023-09-01 DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20230011
Wen Qing Wendy Ye, Candice Griffin, Irina Sverdlichenko, Daniel Brandt Vegas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在医学训练中,患者死亡是不可避免的,随之而来的是心理困扰、同理心下降和学习成绩下降。我们旨在探索住院医师在培训早期患者死亡的经历,包括这些经历的直接和延迟影响,受训人员对这些事件的准备情况和所使用的应对策略,潜在地确定在困难或创伤事件中进一步支持受训人员的差距和机会。方法:我们采用现象学方法进行了一项定性研究,以了解受训者对患者死亡的个人经历。已在安大略省汉密尔顿市麦克马斯特大学完成内科轮换的住院医生受邀参加2020年12月至2021年4月的活动。进行了半结构化访谈,以了解有关患者死亡经历的情况、情绪反应、支持、应对机制和准备情况。访谈被转录和编码,以使用主题和解释分析来识别新出现的主题。结果:18名参与者接受了访谈。采访平均时长为40分钟。参与者的平均年龄为27岁。大多数受训者(10人[56%])在住院的第一年,其中5人(28%)来自家庭医学,4人(22%)来自内科。大多数参与者(13[72%])在医学院期间经历过第一次患者死亡。确定了三个主题:患者死亡情况、即时和延迟的情绪影响以及准备和应对机制。意外死亡、宣告死亡、心肺复苏和与家人沟通是常见的挑战。事件发生后,人们感到内疚、无助和悲伤。感觉准备不足会导致情绪后果,包括睡眠困难、侵入性思维和情绪疏远;然而,参与者始终将这些经历标准化。解释:医疗培训期间患者的死亡对受训者来说可能是一种创伤,并可能使同理心的丧失、实践的改变和残余的情绪影响永久存在。为受训人员做好患者死亡准备并教授适应性应对策略的教育举措可能有助于减轻心理创伤和同理心的丧失;需要进一步的研究来探索这些策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of patient death experiences early in training on resident physicians: a qualitative study.

Background: Patient death is an inevitability during medical training, with subsequent psychologic distress, decreased empathy and worse learning outcomes. We aimed to explore resident experiences with patient death early in training, including the immediate and delayed impacts of these experiences, preparedness of trainees for these events and coping strategies used, potentially identifying gaps and opportunities to further support trainees during difficult or traumatic events.

Methods: We performed a qualitative study using phenomenology methodology to understand trainees' personal experiences with patient death. Resident physicians who had completed an internal medicine rotation at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, were invited to participate from December 2020 to April 2021. Semistructured interviews were conducted to understand circumstances, emotional responses, support, coping mechanisms and preparedness regarding the patient death experience. Interviews were transcribed and coded to identify emerging themes with the use of thematic and interpretive analysis.

Results: Eighteen participants were interviewed. On average, the interviews were 40 minutes in length. The participants' mean age was 27 years. The majority of trainees (10 [56%]) were in their first year of residency, with 5 (28%) from family medicine and 4 (22%) from internal medicine. Most participants (13 [72%]) had experienced their first patient death during medical school. Three themes were identified: patient death circumstances, immediate and delayed emotional impact, and preparedness and coping mechanisms. Unexpected death, pronouncing death, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and communicating with families were common challenges. Feelings of guilt, helplessness and grief followed the events. Feeling underprepared contributed to emotional consequences, including difficulties sleeping, intrusive thoughts and emotional distancing; however, these experiences were consistently normalized by participants.

Interpretation: Patient death during medical training can be traumatic for trainees and may perpetuate loss of empathy, changes to practice and residual emotional effects. Educational initiatives to prepare trainees for patient death and teach adaptive coping strategies may help mitigate psychologic trauma and loss of empathy; further research is required to explore these strategies.

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