Sullivan Amy M, Lakoma Matthew D, Block Susan D
Division of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, 44 Binney Street, Room G420D, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2003 Sep;18(9):685-95. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.2003.21215.x.
To assess the status of medical education in end-of-life care and identify opportunities for improvement.
Telephone survey.
U.S. academic medical centers.
National probability sample of 1,455 students, 296 residents, and 287 faculty (response rates 62%, 56%, and 41%, respectively) affiliated with a random sample of 62 accredited U.S. medical schools.
Measurements assessed attitudes, quantity and quality of education, preparation to provide or teach care, and perceived value of care for dying patients. Ninety percent or more of respondents held positive views about physicians' responsibility and ability to help dying patients. However, fewer than 18% of students and residents received formal end-of-life care education, 39% of students reported being unprepared to address patients' fears, and nearly half felt unprepared to manage their feelings about patients' deaths or help bereaved families. More than 40% of residents felt unprepared to teach end-of-life care. More than 40% of respondents reported that dying patients were not considered good teaching cases, and that meeting psychosocial needs of dying patients was not considered a core competency. Forty-nine percent of students had told patients about the existence of a life-threatening illness, but only half received feedback from residents or attendings; nearly all residents had talked with patients about wishes for end-of-life care, and 33% received no feedback.
Students and residents in the United States feel unprepared to provide, and faculty and residents unprepared to teach, many key components of good care for the dying. Current educational practices and institutional culture in U.S. medical schools do not support adequate end-of-life care, and attention to both curricular and cultural change are needed to improve end-of-life care education.
评估临终关怀医学教育的现状,并确定改进的机会。
电话调查。
美国学术医疗中心。
来自美国62所经认可的医学院校随机样本的1455名学生、296名住院医师和287名教员的全国概率样本(回复率分别为62%、56%和41%)。
测量指标评估了态度、教育的数量和质量、提供或教授护理的准备情况以及对临终患者护理的感知价值。90%或更多的受访者对医生帮助临终患者的责任和能力持积极看法。然而,不到18%的学生和住院医师接受过正式的临终关怀教育,39%的学生表示未做好应对患者恐惧的准备,近一半的人觉得未做好应对患者死亡感受或帮助丧亲家庭的准备。超过40%的住院医师觉得未做好教授临终关怀的准备。超过40%的受访者表示,临终患者不被视为好的教学案例,满足临终患者的心理社会需求不被视为核心能力。49%的学生告知过患者存在危及生命的疾病,但只有一半的人得到住院医师或主治医生的反馈;几乎所有住院医师都与患者谈论过临终护理的愿望,33%的人未得到反馈。
美国的学生和住院医师感觉未做好提供临终优质护理许多关键环节的准备,教员和住院医师也感觉未做好教授这些环节的准备。美国医学院校当前的教育实践和机构文化不支持充分的临终关怀,需要关注课程和文化变革以改善临终关怀教育。