Department of Community Health Sciences,FMH College of Medicine & Dentistry, Lahore, Pakistan.
BMC Med Educ. 2010 Jan 26;10:7. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-10-7.
Interactive methods like role play, recorded video scenarios and objective structured clinical exam (OSCE) are being regularly used to teach and assess communication skills of medical students in the western world. In developing countries however, they are still in the preliminary phases of execution in most institutes. Our study was conducted in a naïve under resourced setup to assess the impact of such teaching methodologies on the counseling skills of medical students.
Fifty four 4th year MBBS students were identified to be evaluated for communication skills by trained facilitators in a pre-intervention OSCE. The same group of students was given a demonstration of ideal skill level by means of videos and role playing sessions in addition to real life interaction with patients during hospital and community rotations. A post-intervention evaluation was carried out six months later through OSCE and direct observation through structured checklist (DOS) in hospital and community settings. The combined and individual performance levels of these students were analyzed.
There was a statistically significant difference in the communication skills of students when assessed in the post-intervention OSCE (p = 0.000). Individual post-intervention percentages of study participants displayed improvement as well (n = 45, p = 0.02). No difference was observed between the scores of male and female students when assessed for two specific competencies of antenatal care and breast feeding counseling (p = 0.11). The mean DOS (%) score of 12 randomly selected students was much lower as compared to the post-intervention (%) score but the difference between them was statistically non significant, a result that may have been affected by the small sample size as well as other factors that may come into play in real clinical settings and were not explored in this study (59.41 +/- 7.8 against 82.43 +/- 22.08, p = 0.88).
Videos and role play in combination with community and clinical exposure are effective modes of teaching counseling skills to medical students. They can be successfully utilized even in a limited resource setup, as demonstrated by our trial.
在西方世界,角色扮演、录像情景模拟和客观结构化临床考试(OSCE)等互动方法已被常规用于教授和评估医学生的沟通技巧。然而,在发展中国家,这些方法在大多数机构中仍处于初步执行阶段。我们的研究在资源有限的条件下进行,旨在评估这些教学方法对医学生咨询技巧的影响。
在干预前 OSCE 中,有 54 名四年级医学学士(MBBS)学生由经过培训的辅导员对沟通技巧进行评估。除了在医院和社区轮转期间与患者进行实际互动外,该组学生还通过录像和角色扮演来演示理想的技能水平。六个月后,通过 OSCE 以及在医院和社区环境中通过结构化观察检查表(DOS)进行干预后评估。分析这些学生的综合和个体表现水平。
在干预后 OSCE 中,学生的沟通技巧存在统计学上的显著差异(p = 0.000)。研究参与者的个体干预后百分比也有所提高(n = 45,p = 0.02)。在评估产前保健和母乳喂养咨询的两项特定能力时,男女学生的得分没有差异(p = 0.11)。随机选择的 12 名学生的平均 DOS(%)得分明显低于干预后的(%)得分,但两者之间的差异无统计学意义,这一结果可能受到样本量较小以及其他可能在实际临床环境中发挥作用的因素的影响,而这些因素在本研究中并未探讨(59.41 +/- 7.8 与 82.43 +/- 22.08,p = 0.88)。
视频和角色扮演与社区和临床接触相结合是向医学生教授咨询技巧的有效模式。正如我们的试验所示,即使在资源有限的情况下,这些方法也可以成功使用。