Kaye J, Gracely E, Loscalzo G
Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19129.
J Cancer Educ. 1994 Summer;9(2):77-81. doi: 10.1080/08858199409528275.
This study evaluated the effect of a death-education course on the death-related anxiety and attitudes toward death of 71 medical students not yet exposed to clinical rotations and four health care professionals. The Collect-Lester Fear of Death Scale and a semantic differential technique measuring attitudes toward the dying patient and his or her family were administered to course attendees before and after the course and to freshman students not taking the course. The 75 course attendees and the 93 controls completed the baseline measures, and 71 course attendees and 46 controls responded to the post-course evaluation. The course did not produce significant changes on the four Collett-Lester subscales, although there was an overall decline in anxiety when the two groups were combined (p = 0.035). Semantic differential scales showed no change for controls but a marked improvement in attitudes toward "treating the dying patient" and "dealing with the dying patient's family" for attendees (p < 0.001 for both). In summary, course participation resulted in improvement in students' attitudes toward dealing with death.
本研究评估了一门死亡教育课程对71名尚未参加临床实习的医科学生以及4名医护专业人员与死亡相关的焦虑和对死亡态度的影响。在课程前后,对参加课程的人员以及未参加该课程的大一学生使用了科利特 - 莱斯特死亡恐惧量表和一种语义差异技术来测量对临终患者及其家属的态度。75名课程参与者和93名对照组完成了基线测量,71名课程参与者和46名对照组对课程后的评估做出了回应。该课程在科利特 - 莱斯特四个分量表上未产生显著变化,尽管两组合并后焦虑总体有所下降(p = 0.035)。语义差异量表显示对照组没有变化,但参与者对“治疗临终患者”和“处理临终患者家属问题”的态度有显著改善(两者p < 0.001)。总之,参与课程使学生在应对死亡的态度上有所改善。