Leeper-Majors Kristine, Veale James R, Westbrook Thomas S, Reed Kendall
Iowa Pain Management Clinic P.C., Des Moines, Iowa 50256, USA.
Curr Surg. 2003 Nov-Dec;60(6):615-22. doi: 10.1016/S0149-7944(03)00157-0.
The purpose of this pilot study was to determine the effectiveness of using feedback from a standardized patient (SP) to teach a surgical resident (SR) informed consent (IC) protocol.
Four general case types of increasing difficulty were tested in a longitudinal experimental design format. The four types of cases were appendectomy, cholecystectomy, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer. Eight SRs of varying years of completion in medical school served as subjects-four in the experimental group (received performance feedback from an SP) and four in the control group (received no SP feedback). Both the control and experimental groups participated in two patient encounters per case type. The first patient encounter served as the pretest, and the second patient encounter was the posttest. In each encounter, an SP rated the resident on 14 measures using an open-ended seven-point rating scale adopted and modified from the Brown University Interpersonal Skill Evaluation (BUISE). Each resident also reviewed a videotape of an expert giving IC between pretest and the posttest for basic instructional protocol. Random stratified sampling was used to equally distribute the residents by postgraduate years. A total of 16 SPs were used in this study. All patient/SR encounters were videotaped.
There was a statistically significant overall change--pretest to posttest and across cases (p = 0.001). The group effect was statistically significant (p = 0.000), with the experimental group averaging about 10 points greater than the control group.
Standardized patient feedback is an effective modality in teaching surgical residents informed consent protocol. This conclusion is tentative, due to the limitations of sample size. The results of this study support continued research on the effects of standardized patient feedback to teach informed consent to surgical residents.
本试点研究的目的是确定利用标准化病人(SP)的反馈来教授外科住院医师(SR)知情同意(IC)方案的有效性。
采用纵向实验设计形式测试了四种难度递增的一般病例类型。这四种病例类型分别是阑尾切除术、胆囊切除术、结直肠癌和乳腺癌。八名医学院毕业年限不同的外科住院医师作为研究对象,其中四名在实验组(接受标准化病人的表现反馈),四名在对照组(未接受标准化病人反馈)。对照组和实验组针对每种病例类型都参与了两次医患接触。第一次医患接触作为预测试,第二次医患接触为后测试。在每次接触中,一名标准化病人使用从布朗大学人际技能评估(BUISE)采用并修改的开放式七点评分量表对住院医师的14项指标进行评分。每位住院医师在预测试和后测试之间还观看了一段专家进行知情同意过程的录像,以获取基本教学方案。采用随机分层抽样按研究生年级将住院医师平均分配。本研究共使用了16名标准化病人。所有医患接触均进行了录像。
从预测试到后测试以及跨病例来看,总体变化具有统计学意义(p = 0.001)。组间效应具有统计学意义(p = 0.000),实验组平均分比对照组高约10分。
标准化病人反馈是教授外科住院医师知情同意方案的一种有效方式。由于样本量的限制,这一结论具有一定的试探性。本研究结果支持继续研究标准化病人反馈对教授外科住院医师知情同意的效果。