Bearman Margaret
Monash Institute of Health Services Research, Monash University, Clayton Victoria, Australia.
Acad Med. 2003 May;78(5):538-45. doi: 10.1097/00001888-200305000-00021.
Narrative and problem-solving versions of the same virtual patient's case were created for teaching communication skills to medical students. This qualitative study explored how students experienced the virtual patient.
In 1998-1999 in-depth, free-form interviews and follow-ups were conducted with 12 third-year medical students at Monash University in Australia. Students were asked about their experiences with the virtual patient. The interviews were qualitatively analyzed using psychological phenomenology.
Results were in the form of a description of the students' lived experiences with the virtual patient. Findings indicated that students responded to the virtual patient as if she were real but they felt a simultaneous sense of prefabrication, which often led to frustration. Students' experiences of both versions were similar, but the narrative version permitted better rapport with the virtual patient.
This phenomenological study indicated that a constructed, computer-based virtual patient can have substantial emotional effects on medical students.
为向医学生传授沟通技巧,针对同一虚拟患者的病例创建了叙事版和解决问题版。本定性研究探讨了学生对虚拟患者的体验。
1998 - 1999年,对澳大利亚莫纳什大学的12名三年级医学生进行了深入的、自由形式的访谈及后续跟进。询问学生他们对虚拟患者的体验。采用心理现象学对访谈进行定性分析。
结果以对学生与虚拟患者实际体验的描述形式呈现。研究结果表明,学生对虚拟患者的反应就好像她是真实的,但他们同时又有一种预制感,这常常导致沮丧。学生对两个版本的体验相似,但叙事版能与虚拟患者建立更好的融洽关系。
这项现象学研究表明,一个构建的、基于计算机的虚拟患者会对医学生产生重大的情感影响。