Department of Family Medicine, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Med Educ. 2019 Jul;53(7):677-686. doi: 10.1111/medu.13806. Epub 2019 Feb 14.
Oral case presentations following resident-patient interactions provide the primary mechanism by which faculty supervisors assess resident competence. However, the extent to which these presentations capture the content and quality of resident-patient communication during the encounter remains unknown. We aimed to determine whether: (i) the resident-patient encounter content matched information conveyed in the case presentation; (ii) the quality of resident-patient communication was accurately conveyed, and (iii) supervisors addressed effective and ineffective communication processes.
A total of 22 pairs of resident-patient encounters and family medicine resident case presentations were video- or audiorecorded, transcribed and compared for content. Resident-patient communication was assessed using adapted versions of the Calgary-Cambridge Guide to the Medical Interview and Explanation and Planning Scale.
Interviews and presentations contained largely congruent content, but social history and the patient's perspective were consistently excluded from case presentations. Although six of 19 specific communication skills were used in over 80% of resident encounters, the effective use of communication skills was widely variable. In most presentations, the quality of resident-patient communication was not explicitly conveyed to the supervisor. Although resident presentations provided 'cues' about communication issues, supervisors rarely responded.
This study lends support to direct observation in workplace-based learning of communication skills. When content areas such as the patient's perspective and education are excluded, supervisors cannot address them. In addition, presentations provided minimal insight about the quality of resident-patient encounters and limited the ability to address communication skills. These skills could be enhanced by attending to communication cues during case presentations, making increased use of direct observation and feedback, and promoting faculty development to address these missed teaching opportunities.
住院医师与患者互动后的口头病例汇报是教师评估住院医师能力的主要手段。然而,这些汇报在多大程度上能捕捉到医患互动过程中的内容和质量仍然未知。我们旨在确定:(i)住院医师与患者的互动内容是否与病例汇报中传达的信息相匹配;(ii)住院医师与患者的沟通质量是否准确传达,以及 (iii)教师是否解决了有效和无效的沟通流程。
总共记录、转录并比较了 22 对住院医师与患者的互动和家庭医学住院医师病例汇报,以了解其内容。使用经过改编的卡尔加里-剑桥医学访谈指南和解释与计划量表来评估住院医师与患者的沟通。
访谈和汇报的内容基本一致,但病例汇报始终排除了社会史和患者视角。尽管 19 项具体沟通技巧中有 6 项在超过 80%的住院医师互动中使用,但沟通技巧的有效使用存在很大差异。在大多数汇报中,住院医师与患者的沟通质量并没有明确传达给教师。尽管住院医师的汇报提供了有关沟通问题的“线索”,但教师很少做出回应。
本研究支持在基于工作场所的学习中直接观察沟通技巧。当排除患者视角和教育等内容领域时,教师无法解决这些问题。此外,汇报提供了关于住院医师与患者互动质量的有限见解,限制了解决沟通技巧的能力。通过在病例汇报中关注沟通线索、增加直接观察和反馈的使用以及促进教师发展以解决这些教学机会的缺失,可以提高这些技能。