Family Medicine Department, University of Texas Medical Branch, 301 University Boulevard, Galveston, TX 77555-1123, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2012 Aug 3;12:64. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-12-64.
Primary care physicians (PCPs) provide ~50 % of all mental health services in the U.S. Given the widening gap between patient mental health needs and resources available to meet those needs, there is an increasing demand for family medicine and psychiatry trainees to master competencies in both behavioral medicine and primary care counseling during residency-if for no other reason than to accommodate the realities of medical practice given the oft present gap between the need for psychiatric services and the availability, quality, and/or affordability of specialized psychiatric care. To begin to address this gap, a skills-based, interactive curriculum based on motivational interviewing (MI) as a teaching method is presented.
The curriculum described in this paper is a four-week block rotation taught in the second year of residency. Motivational interviewing (MI) is used as a teaching approach toward the goal of clinical behavior change. Residents' strengths, personal choice and autonomy are emphasized. Each week of the rotation, there is a clinical topic and a set of specific skills for mastery. Residents are offered a "menu" of skills, role modeling, role/real play, practice with standardized patients (SP), and direct supervision in clinic.
Thirty-nine residents have completed the curriculum. Based on residents' subjective reporting using pre-post scales (i.e., importance and confidence), all participants to date have reported substantial increases in confidence/self-efficacy using primary care counseling skills in their continuity clinic.
This paper presents an innovative, empirically based model for teaching the essential skills necessary for physicians providing care for patients with mental/emotional health needs as well as health-behavior change concerns. Implications for training in the broader context, particularly as it relates to multi-disciplinary and collaborative models of teaching/training are discussed.
初级保健医生(PCPs)提供了美国所有心理健康服务的 50%左右。鉴于患者心理健康需求与满足这些需求的可用资源之间差距不断扩大,越来越需要家庭医学和精神病学培训生在住院期间掌握行为医学和初级保健咨询方面的能力——如果不是为了适应医学实践的现实,因为精神科服务的需求与专门精神科护理的可用性、质量和/或可负担性之间经常存在差距。为了解决这一差距,提出了一种基于互动的技能为基础的课程,以动机访谈(MI)作为教学方法。
本文介绍的课程是在住院医师第二年进行的为期四周的轮转。动机访谈(MI)被用作一种教学方法,旨在实现临床行为改变的目标。强调居民的优势、个人选择和自主权。轮转的每一周都有一个临床主题和一组特定的技能掌握。居民可以选择“菜单”中的技能、角色模型、角色/真实角色扮演、与标准化患者(SP)一起练习和在诊所进行直接监督。
已有 39 名居民完成了该课程。根据居民使用前后量表(即重要性和信心)的主观报告,迄今为止,所有参与者都报告说,在他们的连续性诊所中,使用初级保健咨询技能的信心/自我效能感有了实质性提高。
本文提出了一种创新的、基于经验的模式,用于教授为有心理/情绪健康需求以及健康行为改变问题的患者提供护理的医生所需的基本技能。讨论了在更广泛背景下的培训意义,特别是与多学科和协作教学/培训模式相关的意义。