Clinical Associate Professor, Departments of Medical Education and Emergency Medicine, University of Illinois College of Medicine; Vice President, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.
Resident Physician, Departments of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of California, San Francisco.
MedEdPORTAL. 2024 Jan 2;20:11377. doi: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11377. eCollection 2024.
Medical Spanish courses in US medical schools aim to teach patient-centered communication, yet many existing resources focus on technical vocabulary and may inadvertently increase jargon use with patients. Graphic medicine presents an opportunity for interactive learning that centers the patient experience, yet it has never been explored in medical Spanish education.
We developed a Medical Spanish Graphic Activity (MeGA) for medical student deliberate practice of patient-centered verbal communication focused on three aspects: diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up care. Each 30-minute activity included a comics handout depicting a patient with a common problem. Students used voice-to-text technology to record their explanations in response to prompts. Transcripts were analyzed for jargon use, including total jargon, unexplained jargon, and problem words (non-Spanish words plus unexplained jargon), utilizing a previously published, reliable protocol for Spanish medical jargon classification. Participants voluntarily provided postactivity feedback.
Twenty-nine fourth-year students with intermediate or greater Spanish skills participated in a series of 10 MeGA activities between January and April 2022. Unexplained jargon use and problem words progressively decreased for all transcripts (diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up; all s < .001). Total jargon use also decreased, but this was not significant in follow-up transcripts ( = .38). All students agreed that MeGA helped them enhance communication skills applicable to patient care and self-identify strengths and limitations.
MeGA is realistic to implement, engages students' active participation in the speaking domain, and reduces unexplained jargon use. Future studies should explore the broader application of this model and engage patient perspectives.
美国医学院的医学西班牙语课程旨在教授以患者为中心的沟通技巧,但许多现有资源都侧重于专业词汇,可能会无意中增加与患者交流时的行话使用。图像医学为以患者体验为中心的互动学习提供了机会,但它从未在医学西班牙语教育中得到探索。
我们为医学生开发了一种医学西班牙语图形活动(MeGA),用于有针对性地练习以患者为中心的口头沟通,重点关注三个方面:诊断、治疗和随访护理。每个 30 分钟的活动都包括一个漫画讲义,描绘了一个患有常见问题的患者。学生使用语音到文本技术记录他们对提示的解释。使用先前发表的、可靠的西班牙语医学术语分类协议分析记录的术语使用情况,包括术语使用总量、未解释术语和问题词(非西班牙语单词加未解释术语)。参与者自愿提供活动后的反馈。
29 名具有中级或更高西班牙语水平的四年级学生在 2022 年 1 月至 4 月期间参加了一系列 10 次 MeGA 活动。所有转录本的未解释术语和问题词使用量都逐渐减少(诊断、治疗和随访;所有 P 值均<.001)。虽然术语使用总量也有所减少,但随访转录本中这一变化并不显著(P =.38)。所有学生都认为 MeGA 有助于他们提高适用于患者护理的沟通技巧,并自我识别优势和局限性。
MeGA 易于实施,能让学生积极参与口语领域,并减少未解释术语的使用。未来的研究应该探索该模型的更广泛应用,并结合患者的观点。