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A rigorous evaluation of an institutionally-based communication skills program for post-graduate oncology trainees
•Medical trainees improved in confidence in communication skills after a course.•Trainees used more communication skills with actor-patients after a course.•Trainees with low baseline scores improved communication skills with real patients. Integrating education about physician-patient communication...
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Published in: | Patient education and counseling 2018-11, Vol.101 (11), p.1924-1933 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Medical trainees improved in confidence in communication skills after a course.•Trainees used more communication skills with actor-patients after a course.•Trainees with low baseline scores improved communication skills with real patients.
Integrating education about physician-patient communication into oncology specialists’ education is important to improve quality of care. Our aim was to rigorously evaluate a 4-year institutionally-based patient communication skills program for oncology post-graduate trainees.
Trainees from 10 specialties in the U.S. participated in patient communication skills modules tailored to sub-specialties. The program was evaluated by comparing pre-post scores on hierarchical outcomes: course evaluation, self-confidence, skills uptake in standardized and real patient encounters, and patient evaluations of satisfaction with communication. We examined breadth of skill usage as key outcome. Generalized estimating equations were used in data analysis.
Two hundred and sixty-two trainees’ data were analyzed, resulting in 984 standardized and 753 real patient encounters. Participants reported high satisfaction and demonstrated significant skill growth with standardized patients, but transfer of these skills into real patient encounters was incomplete. Participants with lower baseline scores had larger improvements with both standardized and real patients.
The program was well received and increased participant skills in the simulated setting without effective transfer to real patient encounters.
Future work should allocate proportionally greater resources to trainees with lower baseline scores and measure breadth of participant skill usage as an outcome. |
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ISSN: | 0738-3991 1873-5134 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.pec.2018.05.026 |