Using children as simulated patients in communication training for residents and medical students: A pilot program

被引:36
作者
Brown, R
Doonan, S
Shellenberger, S
机构
[1] Mercer Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Macon, GA 31201 USA
[2] Mercer Univ, Sch Med, Stand Patient Program, Macon, GA 31201 USA
[3] Mercer Univ, Sch Med, Dept Family Med, Macon, GA 31207 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00001888-200512000-00010
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Medical schools are charged with the challenge of teaching effective communication skills, a core competency for residents and medical students. Especially challenging is the task of developing effective methods for training residents and students to communicate with children with mental health issues. The authors describe a pilot program at Mercer University School of Medicine that used pediatric standardized patients (SPs), ages 9-19, to aid in training residents and medical students in complex interviewing skills addressing mental health issues. New curriculum components for four pediatric problems, anorexia nervosa, depression, separation anxiety, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), were designed and implemented by the authors in 2002-04. The training sessions were evaluated by the participating SPs as well as the residents and medical students in training. The components of the training were a lecture and subsequent practice using pediatric SPs and adults acting as their mothers. Evaluation included the qualitative analysis of SPs' reactions to participation in the training as described during a posttraining-session focus-group, as well as questionnaire responses by residents and medical students. The children role-playing the scenario of a difficult-to-manage situation and their adult "parent" actors voiced strongly positive reactions to participating in training residents and medical students. The reactions of physicians in training were also positive. The authors thus conclude that child and adolescent actors can be effectively used as SPs to train residents and students in complex interviewing skills, even in cases involving children with challenging mental health issues.
引用
收藏
页码:1114 / 1120
页数:7
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]  
*ACC COUNC GRAD ME, 1999, OUTC PROJ
[2]  
*AM AM MED COLL, 1999, CONT ISS MED COMM ME
[3]   The use of standardized patients in research in general practice [J].
Beullens, J ;
Rethans, JJ ;
Goedhuys, J ;
Buntinx, F .
FAMILY PRACTICE, 1997, 14 (01) :58-62
[4]   Mental health in pediatric settings: Distribution of disorders and factors related to service use [J].
Briggs-Gowan, MJ ;
Horwitz, SM ;
Schwab-Stone, ME ;
Leventhal, JM ;
Leaf, PJ .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2000, 39 (07) :841-849
[5]   Persistence of psychiatric disorders in pediatric settings [J].
Briggs-Gowan, MJ ;
Owens, PL ;
Schwab-Stone, ME ;
Leventhal, JM ;
Leaf, PJ ;
Horwitz, SM .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2003, 42 (11) :1360-1369
[6]   Using a standardized family to teach clinical skills to medical students [J].
Clay, MC ;
Lane, H ;
Willis, SE ;
Peal, M ;
Chakravarthi, S ;
Poehlman, G .
TEACHING AND LEARNING IN MEDICINE, 2000, 12 (03) :145-149
[7]   A clinical performance exercise for medicine-pediatrics residents emphasizing complex psychosocial skills [J].
Duke, MB ;
Griffith, CH ;
Haist, SA ;
Wilson, JF .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2001, 76 (11) :1153-1157
[8]   Primary care treatment of pediatric psychosocial problems: A study from pediatric research in office settings and ambulatory sentinel practice network [J].
Gardner, W ;
Kelleher, KJ ;
Wasserman, R ;
Childs, G ;
Nutting, P ;
Lillienfeld, H ;
Pajer, K .
PEDIATRICS, 2000, 106 (04) :E44
[9]   Communicating bad news: A pediatric department's evaluation of a simulated intervention [J].
Greenberg, LW ;
Ochsenschlager, D ;
O'Donnell, R ;
Mastruserio, J ;
Cohen, GJ .
PEDIATRICS, 1999, 103 (06) :1210-1217
[10]  
Lane JL, 1999, ARCH PEDIAT ADOL MED, V153, P637