Johnson S M, Kurtz M E, Tomlinson T, Fleck L
Department of Family Medicine (DFM), Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824-1316.
Acad Med. 1992 Sep;67(9):598-600. doi: 10.1097/00001888-199209000-00012.
This paper describes a unit on the informed consent process taught to 119 first-year students at the Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine in 1988-89. The unit consisted of a pretest and a posttest, a lecture, readings, small-group discussions, a model videotaped interview, and the students' videotaped interviews with one of two simulated patients. In the interviews, the students were most successful in establishing rapport and engaging the patients in discussions of treatment alternatives, and were less successful in perceiving the patients as unique individuals and in dealing with situations that involved conflict or confrontation. The authors suggest that curricula can be enhanced by focusing on the importance of patients' participation in the informed consent process.
本文描述了1988 - 1989年在密歇根州立大学整骨医学院教授给119名一年级学生的关于知情同意过程的一个单元。该单元包括一次预测试和一次后测试、一场讲座、阅读材料、小组讨论、一段模拟访谈录像以及学生与两名模拟患者之一进行的访谈录像。在访谈中,学生们在建立融洽关系并促使患者参与治疗方案讨论方面最为成功,而在将患者视为独特个体以及处理涉及冲突或对抗的情况方面则不太成功。作者建议,通过关注患者参与知情同意过程的重要性,可以改进课程设置。