J.E. Steinauer is professor, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, & Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California. P. O'Sullivan is professor, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California. F. Preskill is associate director for innovating education in reproductive health, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California. O. ten Cate is professor of medical education, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands. A. Teherani is professor, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California.
Acad Med. 2018 Sep;93(9):1359-1366. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002269.
Physicians can find it challenging to provide high-quality care to "difficult patients." While studies support that medical students also find some patients "difficult," little is known about why they do or how being a student affects their perceptions. The authors conducted this study to gain a deeper understanding of students' experiences with "difficult patients" to inform clinical teaching about effective patient communication and patient-centered care.
In 2016, the authors conducted interviews with fourth-year medical students, who were asked to describe patient interactions in which they felt negative emotions toward the patient, as well as describe the clinical setting and their feelings. The authors audiorecorded and transcribed the interviews. Then, using a constructivist grounded theory approach, they reviewed the transcripts, coded the data using a codebook they had developed, and grouped the codes into themes.
Twenty-six students (of 44 volunteers and 180 students invited) were interviewed. Students described negative feelings toward patients and patients' behaviors, which were exacerbated by three situations related to their role and expectations as learners: (1) patients' interference with students' ability to "shine"; (2) patients' interference with students' expectations of patient-centered care; and (3) students' lack of the tools or authority to improve patients' health.
Educators should consider these findings, which can be explained by the professional identity formation and goal orientation theory frameworks, as they teach medical students to provide high-quality care for patients they find "difficult."
医生在为“难缠患者”提供高质量的医疗服务时可能会感到困难。虽然有研究表明医学生也认为有些患者“难缠”,但我们对于他们为什么会这样认为以及作为学生对他们的看法有何影响知之甚少。作者开展了这项研究,以深入了解学生与“难缠患者”的互动经历,为临床教学提供有效的医患沟通和以患者为中心的护理知识。
在 2016 年,作者对四年级医学生进行了访谈,要求他们描述在与患者互动中感到负面情绪的经历,并描述临床环境和他们的感受。作者对访谈进行了录音和转录。然后,作者采用建构主义扎根理论方法,对转录文本进行了回顾,使用他们开发的代码簿对数据进行编码,并将代码分组为主题。
共有 26 名学生(在 44 名志愿者和 180 名受邀学生中)接受了访谈。学生们描述了对患者及其行为的负面感受,这些感受因与他们作为学习者的角色和期望相关的三种情况而加剧:(1)患者干扰了学生“表现”的能力;(2)患者干扰了学生对以患者为中心的护理的期望;(3)学生缺乏改善患者健康的工具或权威。
教育者在教授医学生为他们认为“难缠”的患者提供高质量的医疗服务时,应考虑这些发现,这些发现可以用专业身份形成和目标导向理论框架来解释。