Ioshimoto Thais, Shitara Danielle Ioshimoto, do Prado Gilmar Fernades, Pizzoni Raymon, Sassi Rafael Hennemann, de Gois Aécio Flávio Teixeira
Departamento de Medicina. Rua Pedro de Toledo, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), 719, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein (HIAE), São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
BMC Med Educ. 2020 Oct 2;20(1):339. doi: 10.1186/s12909-020-02253-8.
According to the Latin America Association for palliative care, Brazil offers only 0.48 palliative care services per 1 million inhabitants. In 2012, no accredited physicians were working in palliative care, while only 1.1% of medical schools included palliative care education in their undergraduate curricula. As a reflection of the current scenario, little research about end-of-life care has been published so that studies addressing this subject in the Brazilian setting are crucial.
A cross-sectional study study conducted with students applying for the medical residency of the Federal University of São Paulo were invited to voluntarily participate in an anonymous and self-administered questionnaire survey. The latter included demographic information, attitudes, prior training in end-of-life care, prior end-of-life care experience, the 20-item Palliative Care Knowledge Test (PCKT) and a consent term.
Of the 3086 subjects applying for residency, 2349 (76%) answered the survey, 2225 were eligible for analysis while 124 were excluded due to incomplete data. Although the majority (99,2%) thought it was important to have palliative care education in the medical curriculum, less than half of them (46,2%) reported having received no education on palliative care. The overall performance in the PCKT was poor, with a mean score of 10,79 (± 3). While philosophical questions were correctly answered (81,8% of correct answers), most participants lacked knowledge in symptom control (50,7% for pain, 57,3% for dyspnea, 52,2% for psychiatric problems and 43,4% for gastrointestinal problems). Doctors that had already concluded a prior residency program and the ones that had prior experience with terminal patients performed better in the PCKT (p < 0,001). The high-performance group (more than 50% of correct answers) had received more training in end-of-life care, showed more interest in learning more about the subject, had a better sense of preparedness, as well as a higher percentage of experience in caring for terminal patients (p < 0,001).
Our study showed that Brazilian physicians lack not only the knowledge, but also training in end-of-life medicine. Important factors to better knowledge in end-of-life care were prior training, previous contact with dying patients and prior medical residency. Corroborating the literature, for this group, training showed to be a key factor in overall in this area of knowledge. Therefore, Brazilian medical schools and residency programs should focus on improving palliative training, especially those involving contact with dying patients.
根据拉丁美洲姑息治疗协会的数据,巴西每百万居民仅提供0.48项姑息治疗服务。2012年,没有经过认证的医生从事姑息治疗工作,而只有1.1%的医学院在其本科课程中纳入了姑息治疗教育。作为当前情况的反映,关于临终关怀的研究发表得很少,因此在巴西背景下针对这一主题的研究至关重要。
对申请圣保罗联邦大学医学住院医师项目的学生进行了一项横断面研究,邀请他们自愿参与一项匿名的自填式问卷调查。问卷包括人口统计学信息、态度、临终关怀的先前培训、先前的临终关怀经验、20项姑息治疗知识测试(PCKT)和一份同意书。
在申请住院医师项目的3086名受试者中,2349名(76%)回答了调查,2225名符合分析条件,124名因数据不完整被排除。尽管大多数人(99.2%)认为在医学课程中进行姑息治疗教育很重要,但其中不到一半的人(46.2%)报告未接受过姑息治疗教育。PCKT的总体表现较差,平均得分为10.79(±3)。虽然哲学问题回答正确(正确答案率为81.8%),但大多数参与者在症状控制方面缺乏知识(疼痛方面为50.7%,呼吸困难方面为57.3%,精神问题方面为52.2%,胃肠道问题方面为43.4%)。已经完成先前住院医师项目的医生和有过终末期患者护理经验的医生在PCKT中的表现更好(p<0.001)。高分组合(正确答案率超过50%)接受了更多的临终关怀培训,对了解更多该主题表现出更大的兴趣,有更好的准备意识,以及更高比例的终末期患者护理经验(p<0.001)。
我们的研究表明,巴西医生不仅缺乏临终医学知识,也缺乏相关培训。更好地掌握临终关怀知识的重要因素包括先前的培训、与临终患者的先前接触以及先前的医学住院医师经历。与文献一致,对于这个群体来说,培训是该知识领域整体的关键因素。因此,巴西医学院和住院医师项目应专注于改进姑息治疗培训,特别是那些涉及与临终患者接触的培训。