Blackwell B, Griffin B, Magill M, Bencze R
J Med Educ. 1978 Aug;53(8):672-5. doi: 10.1097/00001888-197808000-00008.
Poor patient compliance is common in clinical practice but difficult to demonstrate to medical students in a convincing manner. To accomplish this, the authors asked medical students who preregistered for a conference on patient compliance to adopt the role of "patient" and to take "medication" (Vitamin C) for one week, to observe certain dietary restrictions, and to complete an attitude and health beliefs questionnaire. The educational impact was intensified by making prior predictions about outcome which were almost exactly confirmed. The predictions concerned failure to fill the prescription, extent and type of noncompliance, and significant differences in attitudes between compliant and noncompliant students. The attitudes of the students resembled those of noncompliant patients asked to take medication for nonsymptomatic disorders (such as hypertension). Those students who participated in the drug-taking experience rated the educational impact of the conference more highly than did those students who attended the conference but did not take part in the drug project.
患者依从性差在临床实践中很常见,但很难以令人信服的方式向医学生展示。为了做到这一点,作者要求预先报名参加患者依从性会议的医学生扮演“患者”的角色,服用“药物”(维生素C)一周,遵守特定的饮食限制,并完成一份态度和健康信念问卷。通过对结果做出几乎完全得到证实的预先预测,强化了教育效果。这些预测涉及未按处方取药、不依从的程度和类型,以及依从和不依从学生在态度上的显著差异。学生们的态度类似于被要求为无症状疾病(如高血压)服药的不依从患者的态度。那些参与了服药体验的学生对会议的教育效果评价比那些参加了会议但没有参与药物项目的学生更高。