Office of Education, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2019 Nov 27;14(11):e0224325. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224325. eCollection 2019.
Medical education experts argue that grief support training for physicians would improve physician and patient and family wellness, and should therefore be mandatory. However, there is little evidence about the range of curricula interventions or the impact of grief training. The aim of this scoping review was to describe the current landscape of grief training worldwide in medical school, postgraduate residency and continuing professional development in the disciplines of pediatrics, family medicine and psychiatry.
Using Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review principles, MEDLINE, EMBASE, ERIC, PsychInfo and Web of Science were searched by a librarian. Two levels of screening took place: a title and abstract review for articles that fit a predefined criteria and a full-text review of articles that met those criteria. Three investigators reviewed the articles and extracted data for analysis. To supplement the search, we also scanned the reference lists of included studies for possible inclusion.
Thirty-seven articles published between 1979 and 2019 were analyzed. Most articles described short voluntary grief training workshops. At all training levels, the majority of these workshops focused on transmitting knowledge about the ethical and legal dimensions of death, dying and bereavement in medicine. The grief trainings described were characterized by the use of diverse pedagogical tools, including lectures, debriefing sessions, reflective writing exercises and simulation/role-play.
Grief training was associated with increased self-assessed knowledge and expertise; however, few of the studies analyzed the impact of grief training on physician and patient and family wellness. Our synthesis of the literature indicates key gaps exist, specifically regarding the limited emphasis on improving physicians' communication skills around death and dying and the limited use of interactive and self-reflexive learning tools. Most trainings also had an overly narrow focus on bereavement grief, rather than a more broadly defined definition of loss.
医学教育专家认为,对医生进行悲伤支持培训将提高医生、患者和家属的健康水平,因此应该强制执行。然而,关于课程干预的范围或悲伤培训的影响的证据很少。本范围综述的目的是描述全球医学、儿科、家庭医学和精神病学研究生住院医师和继续教育领域的悲伤培训课程的现状。
根据阿特赛和奥马利的范围综述原则,由一名图书管理员对 MEDLINE、EMBASE、ERIC、心理信息和科学网进行了检索。进行了两级筛选:对符合预定义标准的文章进行标题和摘要审查,对符合这些标准的文章进行全文审查。三名调查员审查了这些文章并提取数据进行分析。为了补充搜索,我们还扫描了纳入研究的参考文献列表,以寻找可能纳入的研究。
分析了 1979 年至 2019 年期间发表的 37 篇文章。大多数文章描述了简短的自愿悲伤培训研讨会。在所有培训级别中,这些研讨会的大部分重点是传授医学中有关死亡、濒死和丧亲的伦理和法律维度的知识。描述的悲伤培训课程的特点是使用各种教学工具,包括讲座、汇报会议、反思性写作练习和模拟/角色扮演。
悲伤培训与自我评估的知识和专业技能的增加有关;然而,很少有研究分析悲伤培训对医生、患者和家属健康的影响。我们对文献的综合分析表明,存在一些关键差距,特别是在提高医生在死亡和临终方面的沟通技巧方面,以及在使用互动和自我反思学习工具方面的有限使用。大多数培训课程也过于关注丧亲之痛,而不是更广泛地定义的失落。