Department of General Medicine / Family and Community Medicine, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, 65 Tsurumai-cho, Showa-ku, Nagoya, 466-8550, Japan.
Department of Education for Community Oriented Medicine, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, 65 Tsurumai-cho, Showa-ku, Nagoya, 466-8550, Japan.
BMC Med Educ. 2018 Oct 3;18(1):229. doi: 10.1186/s12909-018-1336-6.
Understanding patients' narratives has been associated with methods of improving care that go beyond what may be regarded as a "narrow" view of scientific medicine. Medical interview training in which medical students develop understanding of the importance of patients' narratives is receiving increased attention. However, students generally receive education on patients' narratives that does not distinguish inpatients and outpatients. No studies exploring the characteristics of outpatients' narratives have been reported. We developed an educational program combining ambulatory clerkship and peer role-play using actual narratives from outpatients that students had encountered during their clerkship. These narratives were used as peer role-play scenarios in which the students acted as outpatients. This study explored what and how medical students learned about the characteristics of outpatients' narratives through this original educational program.
Participants were 70 fifth-year medical students from Nagoya University, Japan. We conducted 13 focus groups, based on a convenience sample of 11 groups in 2012, one group in 2013, and one group in 2017 (from 17 clinical groups in each year). Focus group transcripts were analyzed using the "Steps for Coding and Theorization" qualitative data analysis method. We assessed medical anthropological findings regarding narratives in a conceptual framework.
Patients' narratives as perceived by medical students were divided into four quadrants by two axes: medical versus lived content, and objective versus subjective structure. Students recognized that outpatients' narratives mainly used a subjective structure, but were mixed and crossed each quadrant. This was described as "irreproducibility." Students also recognized that narratives of simulated patients and inpatients were mainly limited to a medical-lived content with an objective structure. These differences in narrative characteristics were recognized through students' previous interactions with simulated patients and inpatients.
Despite some limitations, medical students learn about patients' narratives in our original educational program in a way that would be difficult to achieve through training using simulated patients or inpatients.
理解患者的叙述与超越狭义的科学医学的改善护理方法有关。越来越关注对医学生进行医学访谈培训,以使其了解患者叙述的重要性。然而,学生通常接受的关于患者叙述的教育并没有区分住院患者和门诊患者。没有研究探讨门诊患者叙述的特征。我们开发了一个教育计划,将门诊实习和同伴角色扮演相结合,使用学生在实习期间遇到的门诊患者的真实叙述。这些叙述被用作学生作为门诊患者的同伴角色扮演场景。本研究通过这一原始教育计划,探讨了医学生通过该计划了解门诊患者叙述特征的内容和方式。
参与者是来自日本名古屋大学的 70 名五年级医学生。我们根据 2012 年的 11 个小组、2013 年的一个小组和 2017 年的一个小组(每年 17 个临床小组)的便利样本,进行了 13 次焦点小组讨论。使用“编码和理论化步骤”定性数据分析方法分析焦点小组的转录本。我们在概念框架中评估了关于叙述的医学人类学发现。
医学生感知到的患者叙述可通过两条轴分为四个象限:医学内容与生活内容,客观结构与主观结构。学生们认识到,门诊患者的叙述主要采用主观结构,但混合并跨越了每个象限。这被描述为“不可复制性”。学生们还认识到,模拟患者和住院患者的叙述主要限于具有客观结构的医学-生活内容。这些叙述特征的差异是通过学生之前与模拟患者和住院患者的互动而认识到的。
尽管存在一些限制,但医学生在我们的原始教育计划中学习患者叙述的方式,很难通过使用模拟患者或住院患者进行培训来实现。