Department of Health Policy and Management, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Med Educ. 2009 Oct;43(10):952-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2009.03449.x.
Previous research on ethical issues encountered by medical professionals in training and practice have presented the thematic content of the cases they encounter rather than the activities in which clinicians engage and in which they most often encounter ethical issues. We conducted a direct observation study of paediatrics residents and their preceptors seeing patients in an out-patient general paediatrics clinic. Our objectives were to describe the everyday ethics-related issues paediatrics residents encounter as they interact with patients. Our ultimate goal is to use this knowledge to enhance current efforts to teach ethics to paediatrics residents.
The study team directly observed paediatrics residents discussing patients with their faculty preceptors (19 half-day sessions, 76 hours) in an out-patient general paediatrics clinic located in an urban academic medical centre. Each interaction between resident and preceptor about a single patient was considered a case for further analysis.
A total of 247 cases were recorded. Forty-one of the cases were coded as having ethics-related content. A constant comparative method of qualitative data analysis revealed that residents were most likely to encounter ethical issues when engaged in the following activities: (i) maintaining a therapeutic alliance with the caregiver (e.g. the parent); (ii) prioritising patient or family needs; (iii) adjusting to the power embodied by the role of doctors, and (iv) distinguishing suboptimal care from abuse or neglect. In addition, our findings indicate that it is through their efforts to maintain the therapeutic alliance with the caregivers of their patients that residents engage in and integrate three processes: developing their medical knowledge; adhering to professional norms, and balancing the power inherent in the doctor's role with their responsibility to serve the patient's interests.
Medical faculty tasked with teaching ethics to paediatrics residents can utilise the results of this project to better target and enhance their ethics education efforts directed at residents in the out-patient setting. Future research could further examine and test these findings in other clinical settings (e.g. adult general medicine).
之前关于医学专业人员在培训和实践中遇到的伦理问题的研究,呈现的是他们遇到的案例的主题内容,而不是临床医生所从事的、他们最常遇到伦理问题的活动。我们对在门诊普通儿科诊所看病人的儿科住院医生及其导师进行了直接观察研究。我们的目的是描述儿科住院医生在与患者互动时遇到的与伦理相关的日常问题。我们的最终目标是利用这些知识来加强目前向儿科住院医生教授伦理学的努力。
研究小组在位于城市学术医疗中心的门诊普通儿科诊所,直接观察儿科住院医生与他们的导师讨论患者(19 个半天的课程,76 小时)。将住院医生和导师就单个患者进行的每一次互动都视为进一步分析的案例。
共记录了 247 例。其中 41 例被编码为具有伦理相关内容。采用定性数据分析的恒定比较方法,研究结果表明,住院医生最有可能在以下活动中遇到伦理问题:(i)与照顾者(如父母)保持治疗联盟;(ii)优先考虑患者或家庭的需求;(iii)适应医生角色所赋予的权力;以及(iv)区分次优护理与虐待或忽视。此外,我们的研究结果表明,住院医生通过努力与患者照顾者保持治疗联盟,参与并整合了三个过程:发展他们的医学知识;遵守专业规范;以及平衡医生角色固有的权力与为患者利益服务的责任。
负责向儿科住院医生教授伦理学的医学教师可以利用本项目的结果,更好地针对门诊环境中的住院医生,并加强他们的伦理学教育努力。未来的研究可以在其他临床环境(如成人普通内科)进一步检验和测试这些发现。