Gleicher Sonya Taryn, Hurd Caroline Jeanette, Weisner P Annie, Mendelson Ali Marisa, Creutzfeldt Claire J, Taylor Breana L
From the Department of Neurology (S.T.G., P.A.W., C.J.C., B.L.T.), Division of Geriatrics and Gerontology (C.J.H.), Department of Medicine, University of Washington; and Hospice and Palliative Care (A.M.M.), Kaiser Permanente Washington, Seattle.
Neurol Educ. 2022 Nov 29;1(2):e200021. doi: 10.1212/NE9.0000000000200021. eCollection 2022 Dec.
Neuropalliative care is an emerging interprofessional field that aims to improve communication and quality of life for all people affected by serious neurologic disease. Teaching neuropalliative care skills is a key objective for neurology residencies, and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requires proficiency in palliative care. The objective of this study was to describe a novel longitudinal multimodal curriculum in neuropalliative care communication and evaluate its feasibility and outcomes.
We designed a multimodal curriculum focused on neuropalliative care communication skills using as our theoretical foundation transformative learning theory. We implemented this program for neurology residents at a single academic institution over the course of their 3-year training. Residents underwent (1) 3 communication workshops using VitalTalk modules and simulated patient encounters, (2) 3 or more observed clinical encounters with structured faculty feedback, and (3) at least 3 annual neuropalliative care lectures. We evaluated the effect on learners' self-assessed confidence in neuropalliative care skills with preworkshop and postworkshop questionnaires.
In 2021, 14 of 20 eligible residents attended our workshops and completed the preworkshop questionnaire, and 12 of those completed the postworkshop questionnaire. After the workshop, a larger proportion of residents (75%, 9/12) agreed or strongly agreed that they felt confident leading family meetings compared with before the workshop (57%, 8/14). While more than 90% of residents felt confident recognizing patient and family emotions both before and after the workshop, the workshop improved their confidence in responding to such emotions. Still, some residents neither agreed nor disagreed (42%, 5/12) about feeling confident in responding to emotions after the workshop, and many commented on wanting more training in this area.
The successful implementation and high attendance among eligible participants demonstrate the feasibility of our longitudinal multimodal neuropalliative care curriculum. The evaluation of intervention outcomes suggests that residents' confidence in neuropalliative communication skills improved. Our study shows that VitalTalk is a tool that can be adapted to teach neuropalliative communication skills for neurology residents, and this program can be easily adopted by other neurology training programs.
神经姑息治疗是一个新兴的跨专业领域,旨在改善所有受严重神经系统疾病影响者的沟通状况和生活质量。教授神经姑息治疗技能是神经病学住院医师培训的关键目标,研究生医学教育认证委员会要求具备姑息治疗方面的专业能力。本研究的目的是描述一种新颖的神经姑息治疗沟通纵向多模式课程,并评估其可行性和效果。
我们设计了一个以变革性学习理论为理论基础、聚焦于神经姑息治疗沟通技能的多模式课程。我们在一所学术机构为神经病学住院医师在其3年培训期间实施了该项目。住院医师参加了:(1)3次使用VitalTalk模块和模拟患者会诊的沟通工作坊;(2)3次或更多次有结构化教员反馈的观察性临床会诊;以及(3)至少3次年度神经姑息治疗讲座。我们通过工作坊前和工作坊后的问卷评估对学习者自我评估的神经姑息治疗技能信心的影响。
2021年,20名符合条件的住院医师中有14名参加了我们的工作坊并完成了工作坊前问卷,其中12名完成了工作坊后问卷。工作坊后,与工作坊前(57%,8/14)相比,更大比例的住院医师(75%,9/12)同意或强烈同意他们对主持家庭会议感到自信。虽然超过90%的住院医师在工作坊前后都对识别患者和家属的情绪感到自信,但工作坊提高了他们应对此类情绪的信心。不过,一些住院医师对工作坊后应对情绪是否自信既不同意也不反对(42%,5/12),许多人表示希望在这方面接受更多培训。
合格参与者的成功实施和高参与率证明了我们的神经姑息治疗纵向多模式课程的可行性。对干预效果的评估表明住院医师对神经姑息治疗沟通技能的信心有所提高。我们的研究表明,VitalTalk是一种可用于为神经病学住院医师教授神经姑息治疗沟通技能的工具,该项目可被其他神经病学培训项目轻松采用。