Lapinski Jessica, Colonna Caitlin, Sexton Patricia, Richard Mariah
Am Ann Deaf. 2015 Spring;160(1):36-47. doi: 10.1353/aad.2015.0014.
The study examined the effectiveness of a workshop on Deaf culture and basic medical American Sign Language for increasing osteopathic student physicians' confidence and knowledge when interacting with ASL-using patients. Students completed a pretest in which they provided basic demographic information, rated their confidence levels, took a video quiz on basic medical signs, and experienced a practical standardized encounter with a Deaf patient. They then attended a 4-hour workshop and, 2 weeks later, completed a posttest. Thirty-three students completed the pretest; 29 attended the workshop; 26 completed the posttest. Video quiz scores increased significantly from pretest to posttest, as did scores for the standardized patient encounter after completion of the workshop. Students also reported increased levels of confidence in interactions with the Deaf community. The results suggest that a single workshop was effective in increasing both confidence and short-term knowledge in interactions with Deaf patients.
该研究考察了一场关于聋人文化和基础医学美国手语的工作坊,在提升整骨医学生与使用美国手语患者互动时的信心和知识方面的有效性。学生们完成了一项预测试,在其中他们提供了基本人口统计学信息、对自己的信心水平进行评分、参加了一场关于基本医学手语的视频测验,并与一名聋人患者进行了一次实际的标准化互动。然后他们参加了一个4小时的工作坊,两周后完成了后测。33名学生完成了预测试;29名学生参加了工作坊;26名学生完成了后测。从预测试到后测,视频测验分数显著提高,工作坊结束后标准化患者互动的分数也是如此。学生们还报告称在与聋人社区互动时信心有所增强。结果表明,单次工作坊在提升与聋人患者互动时的信心和短期知识方面是有效的。