Walling Anne, Montello Martha, Moser Scott E, Menikoff Jerry A, Brink Melanie
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Kansas, Wichita 67214, USA.
Fam Med. 2004 Nov-Dec;36(10):710-4.
Fostering appropriate attitudes toward patients begins with recognition of the physician's personal biases and preferences about patients. We sought to assist second-year medical students to identify those patient attributes that may influence their clinical behavior, especially in difficult patient encounters. This study's objectives were (1) to identify the principal patient characteristics reported by students to evoke negative or positive affective reactions sufficient to compromise the quality of patient care and (2) to examine differences between male and female students on these patient characteristics.
An anonymous survey was made of all second-year medical students attending a seminar on medical errors. Students recorded the three principal patient characteristics that might evoke in them a negative personal reaction sufficient to compromise the quality of clinical care. Students then recorded three principal patient characteristics that might evoke a positive reaction sufficient to compromise the quality of clinical care. The data were analyzed to identify the primary concerns of the entire group of students and any significant differences between male and female students.
Information on negative attitudes was provided by 67 of 71 (94%) students and on positive attitudes by 70 of 71 (99%). Content analysis identified four general categories of patient characteristics associated with negative attitudes (patients who are rude, contributed to medical problem, are abusive to others, and other attributes). Five general categories (patients with whom students have personal connection or patients who have physical and/or social attractiveness, vulnerability, power/influence, and other) were associated with positive attitudes by the students. The leading patient attributes reported as likely to influence clinical behavior were the positive attributes of "personal connection" and "attractiveness." These were reported by 60% and 53% of the class, respectively, compared to the leading negative attributes of "rudeness" and "contributed to own condition," each reported by 51% of students. Significant differences between male and female students only occurred in the categories of "rude" and "attractive."
Students are willing to disclose specific, personal attitudes toward patients that they perceive as sufficiently serious to influence the quality of clinical care. More than half of the students anticipated difficulty in providing optimal care to patients who exhibit certain characteristics. More students reported concerns about positive affective reactions to patients than about negative reactions. Medical education should address these issues in strategies to adequately prepare students for practice.
培养对患者的恰当态度始于认识医生对患者的个人偏见和偏好。我们试图帮助二年级医学生识别那些可能影响其临床行为的患者特征,尤其是在面对棘手的患者情况时。本研究的目的是:(1)识别学生报告的会引发足以损害患者护理质量的负面或正面情感反应的主要患者特征;(2)研究男女学生在这些患者特征方面的差异。
对参加医疗差错研讨会的所有二年级医学生进行了一项匿名调查。学生记录下可能引发足以损害临床护理质量的负面个人反应的三个主要患者特征。然后,学生记录下可能引发足以损害临床护理质量的正面反应的三个主要患者特征。对数据进行分析,以确定全体学生的主要关注点以及男女学生之间的任何显著差异。
71名学生中有67名(94%)提供了关于负面态度的信息,71名学生中有70名(99%)提供了关于正面态度的信息。内容分析确定了与负面态度相关的四类患者特征(粗鲁的患者、导致医疗问题的患者、辱骂他人的患者以及其他特征)。五类(学生与之有个人联系的患者或具有身体和/或社会吸引力、易受伤害、有权力/影响力以及其他特征的患者)与学生的正面态度相关。被报告可能影响临床行为的主要患者特征是“个人联系”和“吸引力”这些正面特征。分别有60%和53%的班级学生报告了这些特征,相比之下,主要负面特征“粗鲁”和“导致自身病情”各有51%的学生报告。男女学生之间的显著差异仅出现在“粗鲁”和“有吸引力”类别中。
学生愿意披露他们认为足以影响临床护理质量的对患者的具体个人态度。超过一半的学生预计在为表现出某些特征的患者提供最佳护理时会遇到困难。报告对患者有正面情感反应担忧的学生多于有负面反应担忧的学生。医学教育应在策略中解决这些问题,以便让学生充分为临床实践做好准备。