Batzler Yann-Nicolas, Schallenburger Manuela, Sammer Tabea, Haussmann Jan, Tamaskovics Bálint, Rehlinghaus Marc, von Schreitter Julia, Otten Stefanie, Fohler Corinna, Schwartz Jacqueline, Karger André, Niegisch Günter, Neukirchen Martin
Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf, Medical Faculty and University Hospital Düsseldorf, Interdisciplinary Centre for Palliative Medicine, Düsseldorf, Germany.
CIO ABCD (Aaachen-Bonn-Cologne-Düsseldorf), Centre for integrated oncology (CIO) Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany.
GMS J Med Educ. 2025 Apr 15;42(2):Doc24. doi: 10.3205/zma001748. eCollection 2025.
Given demographic changes and a rising prevalence of oncological diseases, understanding the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and a timely integration of palliative care is crucial. However, both are underrepresented in medical curricula. To address this gap, we introduced a new elective in which students follow the journey of a fictitious patient with prostate cancer from diagnosis until death.
The elective was conducted through repeated joint meetings by a multi-professional and interdisciplinary (palliative care, urology, radiation oncology, psychosomatic medicine) team. Alongside its development, an outcome evaluation was designed to assess satisfaction (Likert scale) and learning gains (comparative self-assessment, CSA [%]). After pilot testing, the content and structure were adapted. The elective followed a blended learning approach. The content covered guideline-adherent treatment of prostate cancer, breaking bad news, initial contact with palliative care, symptom control based on the total pain concept.
Students (n=8) expressed high satisfaction. They found the structure comprehensible and considered the content valuable for medical practice. Students gained knowledge, especially in defining total pain (83%) and the indication of the timely integration of specialized palliative care (77%).
Using prostate cancer as an example disease, we integrated multiple disciplines into treatment strategies, demonstrating the benefits of multi-professional and multidisciplinary collaboration. This approach aids in identifying patients who could benefit from palliative care. Our concept is adaptable to other tumor types and settings, enhancing awareness of patient-centered issues that are often overlooked in medical curricula.
鉴于人口结构的变化以及肿瘤疾病患病率的上升,了解跨学科协作的重要性以及姑息治疗的及时整合至关重要。然而,这两者在医学课程中都未得到充分体现。为了弥补这一差距,我们引入了一门新的选修课,让学生跟随一名虚构的前列腺癌患者从诊断到死亡的全过程。
该选修课由一个多专业、跨学科(姑息治疗、泌尿外科、放射肿瘤学、心身医学)团队通过反复的联席会议进行。在课程开发过程中,设计了一项结果评估,以评估满意度(李克特量表)和学习收获(比较自我评估,CSA [%])。经过试点测试后,对内容和结构进行了调整。该选修课采用混合式学习方法。内容涵盖前列腺癌的指南依从性治疗、告知坏消息、与姑息治疗的初次接触、基于整体疼痛概念的症状控制。
学生(n = 8)表示高度满意。他们认为结构易于理解,并认为内容对医疗实践有价值。学生们获得了知识,尤其是在定义整体疼痛(83%)和及时整合专科姑息治疗的指征(77%)方面。
以前列腺癌为例,我们将多个学科整合到治疗策略中,展示了多专业和多学科协作的益处。这种方法有助于识别可能从姑息治疗中受益的患者。我们的理念适用于其他肿瘤类型和环境,提高了对医学课程中经常被忽视的以患者为中心问题的认识。