Department of Radiation Oncology, Mayo Clinic, 5881 E Mayo Blvd., Phoenix, AZ, 85054, USA.
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
J Cancer Educ. 2023 Dec;38(6):1786-1791. doi: 10.1007/s13187-023-02333-5. Epub 2023 Jun 22.
Communication and interpersonal skills are essential components of oncology patient care. The REFLECT (Respect, Empathy, Facilitate Effective Communication, Listen, Elicit Information, Compassion, and Teach Others) curriculum is a novel framework to improve and refine physician/patient interactions for oncology graduate medical trainees. We seek to evaluate the attitudes and perceptions of the REFLECT communication curriculum among oncology trainees. Seven-question and 8-question Likert scale surveys (1 = not beneficial and 5 = beneficial) were distributed to resident/fellow participants and faculty mentors, respectively. Questions asked trainees and faculty about their perceptions of improvement in communication, handling of stressful situations, the value of the curriculum, and overall impression of the curriculum. Descriptive statistics determined the survey's baseline characteristics and response rates. Kruskal-Wallis rank sum tests were used to compare the distribution of continuous variables. Thirteen resident/fellow participants completed the participant survey. Six (43.6%) Radiation Oncology trainees and 7 (58.3%) Hematology/Oncology fellows completed the trainee survey. Eight (88.9%) Radiation Oncologists and 1 (11.1%) Medical Oncologist completed the observer survey. Faculty and trainees generally felt that the curriculum increased communication skills. Faculty responded more favorably to the program's impact on communication skills (median 5.0 vs. 4.0, p = 0.008). Faculty were more assertive about the curriculum's capabilities to improve a learner's ability to handle stressful situations (median 5.0 vs. 4.0, p = 0.003). Additionally, faculty had a more favorable overall impression of the REFLECT curriculum than the residents/fellows (median 5.0 vs. 4.0, p < 0.001). Radiation Oncology residents felt more strongly that the curriculum enhanced their ability to handle stressful topics, compared to Heme/Onc fellows (median 4.5 vs. 3.0, range 1-5, p = 0.379). Radiation Oncology trainees felt more consistently that the workshops improved their communication skills, compared to Heme/Onc fellows (median 4.5 vs. 3.5, range 1-5, p = 0.410). The overall impression between Rad Onc resident and Heme/Onc fellows was similar (median 4.0, p = 0.586). Conclusions: Overall, the REFLECT curriculum enhanced communication skills of trainees. Oncology trainees and faculty physicians feel that the curriculum was beneficial. As interactive skills and communication is critical to build positive interactions, further work is needed to improve the REFLECT curriculum.
沟通和人际交往技巧是肿瘤患者护理的重要组成部分。REFLECT(尊重、同理心、促进有效沟通、倾听、收集信息、同情和教导他人)课程是一种新颖的框架,可提高和完善肿瘤学住院医师培训医师与患者的互动。我们旨在评估肿瘤学受训者对 REFLECT 沟通课程的态度和看法。分别向住院医师/研究员参与者和教师导师分发了七项和八项李克特量表调查(1=无益,5=有益)。这些问题询问受训者和教师他们对沟通能力提高、处理压力情况、课程价值以及对课程整体印象的看法。描述性统计确定了调查的基线特征和应答率。使用 Kruskal-Wallis 秩和检验比较连续变量的分布。13 名住院医师/研究员完成了参与者调查。6 名(43.6%)放射肿瘤学受训者和 7 名(58.3%)血液/肿瘤学研究员完成了学员调查。8 名(88.9%)放射肿瘤学家和 1 名(11.1%)肿瘤内科医生完成了观察员调查。教师和学员普遍认为该课程提高了沟通技巧。教师对该计划对沟通技巧的影响的反应更为积极(中位数 5.0 对 4.0,p=0.008)。教师更坚信该课程能够提高学习者处理压力情况的能力(中位数 5.0 对 4.0,p=0.003)。此外,教师对 REFLECT 课程的整体印象比住院医师/研究员更为有利(中位数 5.0 对 4.0,p<0.001)。与血液/肿瘤学研究员相比,放射肿瘤学住院医师更强烈地认为该课程增强了他们处理压力话题的能力(中位数 4.5 对 3.0,范围 1-5,p=0.379)。与血液/肿瘤学研究员相比,放射肿瘤学受训者更一致地认为讲习班提高了他们的沟通技巧(中位数 4.5 对 3.5,范围 1-5,p=0.410)。放射肿瘤学住院医师和血液/肿瘤学研究员之间的整体印象相似(中位数 4.0,p=0.586)。结论:总体而言,REFLECT 课程提高了受训者的沟通技巧。肿瘤学受训者和医师认为该课程是有益的。由于互动技能和沟通对于建立积极的互动至关重要,因此需要进一步努力改进 REFLECT 课程。