University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Med Educ. 2018 Feb;52(2):206-215. doi: 10.1111/medu.13472. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
Dealing with emotions is critical for medical trainees' professional development. Taking a sociocultural and narrative approach to understanding emotions, we studied complex clinical situations as a specific context in which emotions are evoked and influenced by the social environment. We sought to understand how medical trainees respond to emotions that arise in those situations.
In an international constructivist grounded theory study, 29 trainees drew two rich pictures of complex clinical situations, one exciting and one frustrating. Rich pictures are visual representations that capture participants' perceptions about the people, situations and factors that create clinical complexity. These pictures were used to guide semi-structured, individual interviews. We analysed visual materials and interviews in an integrated way, starting with looking at the drawings, doing a 'gallery walk', and using the interviews to inform the aesthetic analysis.
Participants' drawings depicted a range of personal emotions in response to complexity, and disclosed unsettling feelings and behaviours that might be considered unprofessional. When trainees felt confident, they were actively participating, engaged in creative problem-solving strategies, and emphasised their personal involvement. When trainees felt the situation was beyond their control, they described how they were running away from the situation, hiding themselves behind others or distancing themselves from patients or families.
A sense of control seems to be a key factor influencing trainees' emotional and behavioural responses to complexity. This is problematic, as complex situations are by their nature emergent and dynamic, which limits possibilities for control. Following a social performative approach to emotions, we should help students understand that feeling out of control is an inherent property of participating in complex clinical situations, and, by extension, that it is not something they will 'grow out of' with expertise.
处理情绪对于医学实习生的专业发展至关重要。我们采用社会文化和叙事方法来理解情绪,将复杂的临床情况视为一个特定的情境,在这个情境中,情绪会受到社会环境的激发和影响。我们试图了解医学生在面对这些情况时如何应对产生的情绪。
在一项国际建构主义扎根理论研究中,29 名实习生绘制了两幅复杂临床情况的丰富图片,一幅令人兴奋,一幅令人沮丧。丰富的图片是一种视觉表现形式,捕捉了参与者对创造临床复杂性的人和情况以及因素的看法。这些图片用于指导半结构化的个人访谈。我们以一种综合的方式分析视觉材料和访谈,首先查看绘图,进行“画廊漫步”,并使用访谈来告知审美分析。
参与者的绘图描绘了他们对复杂性的各种个人情绪反应,并揭示了可能被认为不专业的不安情绪和行为。当实习生感到自信时,他们会积极参与,运用创造性的解决问题策略,并强调自己的个人投入。当实习生感到情况超出了他们的控制范围时,他们描述了自己如何逃避这种情况,躲在别人后面或与患者或家属保持距离。
控制感似乎是影响实习生对复杂性的情绪和行为反应的关键因素。这是有问题的,因为复杂的情况本质上是突发和动态的,这限制了控制的可能性。根据对情绪的社会表现方法,我们应该帮助学生理解,失去控制感是参与复杂临床情况的固有属性,并且,从广义上讲,这并不是他们随着专业知识的增长就会“摆脱”的。