Murinson Beth B, Agarwal Aakash K, Haythornthwaite Jennifer A
Department of Neurology and Clinical Skills/Colleges Advisory Program, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J Pain. 2008 Nov;9(11):975-83. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2008.07.010.
The overarching goal of medical training is to nurture the growth of knowledgeable, caring, and insightful clinicians guided by the ideals of medical professionalism. Recent definitions of professional competence identify essential clinical skills, including cognitive expertise, emotional competence, and reflective capacity. This modern framework reflects the increasingly complex nature of the patient-clinician interaction, in which the clinician must exchange diagnostic information while supportively engaging the patient on a deeper, affective level. The affective dimension can be particularly potent when pain is the primary symptom, as it is for the majority of medical visits. Unfortunately, however, current models of professionalism, used as an early guide for medical trainees to develop an understanding of the clinical exchange, largely focus on interactions in the cognitive domain. To emphasize the importance of emotions in professional development, we propose the Cognitive and Emotional Preparedness Model, which describes the clinical encounter occurring on two channels, one cognitive and the other emotional, and stresses the importance of multidimensional development in preparing the clinician to (1) communicate clinical information, (2) provide emotional support, and (3) actively reflect on experiences for continued improvement. Together, acquisition of knowledge, emotional development, and reflective skill will improve the clinical interaction.
The proficiency of medical trainees in developing clinical skills profoundly shapes patient satisfaction and treatment outcomes. This article reviews the cognitive, emotional, and reflective development of medical trainees and presents a model illustrating how clinical development impacts pain care. For improved efficacy, pain education should be calibrated to students' developmental needs.
医学培训的总体目标是培养有知识、有爱心且有洞察力的临床医生,他们以医学专业精神的理想为指导。最近对专业能力的定义确定了基本的临床技能,包括认知专长、情感能力和反思能力。这种现代框架反映了患者与临床医生互动日益复杂的性质,在这种互动中,临床医生必须在深入情感层面积极与患者互动的同时交流诊断信息。当疼痛是主要症状时,情感维度可能特别有效,因为大多数医疗就诊情况都是如此。然而,不幸的是,当前作为医学实习生理解临床交流早期指南的专业精神模型,很大程度上侧重于认知领域的互动。为强调情感在专业发展中的重要性,我们提出认知与情感准备模型,该模型描述了临床接触通过两个渠道进行,一个是认知渠道,另一个是情感渠道,并强调多维发展对于使临床医生做好准备(1)交流临床信息、(2)提供情感支持以及(3)积极反思经验以持续改进的重要性。知识的获取、情感发展和反思技能共同作用将改善临床互动。
医学实习生培养临床技能的熟练程度深刻影响患者满意度和治疗结果。本文回顾了医学实习生的认知、情感和反思发展,并提出一个模型来说明临床发展如何影响疼痛护理。为提高疗效,疼痛教育应根据学生的发展需求进行调整。