A Narrative Review of Interventions to Teach Medical Students How to Break Bad News

被引:0
|
作者
Vaishnavi Warrier
Archana Pradhan
机构
[1] Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences
[2] Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,undefined
来源
Medical Science Educator | 2020年 / 30卷
关键词
Breaking bad news; Communication skills training; Undergraduate medical education; Doctor-patient relationship; Emotional cues; Nonverbal communication;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Breaking bad news (BBN) is a key advanced communication skill that physicians must learn. Despite the breadth of literature describing patients’ preferences and data citing poor physician competency in this arena, there remains significant dissatisfaction with how doctors deliver bad news. One way to solve this dilemma is to ensure that we are using the best evidence-based educational approaches to train the cadre of medical students who graduate from medical school each year. This article provides a 15-year review of articles on BBN in the undergraduate medical education curriculum that have been validated using the Medical Education Research Quality Instrument (MERSQI) (Acad Med 90:1067–76, 2015). This narrative review aims to identify articles which describe undergraduate medical education curriculum that evaluate how to best teach students to communicate bad news to patients. In the process, the authors reviewed 179 abstracts in 118 academic journals. Articles that met the inclusion criteria were evaluated using the MERSQI and those that scored higher than 11.3 were chosen for analysis. This paper summarizes the 15 articles that met the criteria. The review reveals (1) standard components which should be included in an undergraduate BBN curriculum, (2) a pressing need for utilizing a teaching and evaluation tool that incorporates nonverbal communication, and (3) a further need to test long-term curriculum retention.
引用
收藏
页码:1299 / 1312
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A Narrative Review of Interventions to Teach Medical Students How to Break Bad News
    Warrier, Vaishnavi
    Pradhan, Archana
    [J]. MEDICAL SCIENCE EDUCATOR, 2020, 30 (03) : 1299 - 1312
  • [2] Teaching medical students how to break bad news
    Garg, A
    Buckman, R
    Kason, Y
    [J]. CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 1997, 156 (08) : 1159 - 1164
  • [3] Teaching medical students how to break bad news
    Rancour, P
    Emery, A
    Davies, E
    [J]. PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, 2000, 9 (05) : S94 - S94
  • [4] Teaching medical students how to break bad news: A Turkish experience
    Mustafa Fevzi Dikici
    Fusun Yaris
    Mahcube Cubukcu
    [J]. Journal of Cancer Education, 2009, 24 : 246 - 248
  • [5] Teaching Medical Students How to Break Bad News with Standardized Patients
    John V. Kiluk
    Sophie Dessureault
    Gwendolyn Quinn
    [J]. Journal of Cancer Education, 2012, 27 : 277 - 280
  • [6] Teaching Medical Students How to Break Bad News: A Turkish Experience
    Dikici, Mustafa Fevzi
    Yaris, Fusun
    Cubukcu, Mahcube
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CANCER EDUCATION, 2009, 24 (04) : 246 - 248
  • [7] Teaching Medical Students How to Break Bad News with Standardized Patients
    Kiluk, John V.
    Dessureault, Sophie
    Quinn, Gwendolyn
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CANCER EDUCATION, 2012, 27 (02) : 277 - 280
  • [8] Teaching students to break bad news
    Colletti, L
    Gruppen, L
    Barclay, M
    Stern, D
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2001, 182 (01): : 20 - 23
  • [9] How doctors break bad news
    不详
    [J]. ONCOLOGY-NEW YORK, 2000, 14 (03): : 312 - +
  • [10] DEVELOPMENT OF A ROLE-PLAYING WORKSHOP TO TEACH MEDICAL STUDENTS IN BOTSWANA HOW TO COMMUNICATE EFFECTIVELY AND DELIVER BAD NEWS
    Westmoreland, K. D.
    Banda, F. M.
    Fassl, B. A.
    Mehta, P. S.
    Isaksson, E.
    [J]. PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, 2015, 62 : S395 - S395