What and how are students taught about communicating risks to patients? Analysis of a medical curriculum

Communication is a core competence in medical care. Failure of physicians to properly communicate inherent risks of medical interventions has been linked with inadequate training at school. This study analyses a medical curriculum for assessing the content and quality of teaching risk communication...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-05, Vol.15 (5), p.e0233682-e0233682
Hauptverfasser: Baessler, Franziska, Weidlich, Joshua, Schweizer, Sophie, Ciprianidis, Anja, Bartolovic, Marina, Zafar, Ali, Wolf, Michael, Wagner, Fabienne Louise, Baumann, Tabea Chiara, Mihaljevic, André L, Ditzen, Beate, Roesch-Ely, Daniela, Nikendei, Christoph, Schultz, Jobst-Hendrik
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container_start_page e0233682
container_title PloS one
container_volume 15
creator Baessler, Franziska
Weidlich, Joshua
Schweizer, Sophie
Ciprianidis, Anja
Bartolovic, Marina
Zafar, Ali
Wolf, Michael
Wagner, Fabienne Louise
Baumann, Tabea Chiara
Mihaljevic, André L
Ditzen, Beate
Roesch-Ely, Daniela
Nikendei, Christoph
Schultz, Jobst-Hendrik
description Communication is a core competence in medical care. Failure of physicians to properly communicate inherent risks of medical interventions has been linked with inadequate training at school. This study analyses a medical curriculum for assessing the content and quality of teaching risk communication to students. A checklist based on the national guidelines of core competencies on risk communication required of physicians was developed. Participant observers surveyed all teaching sessions at a medical school during a semester to record the frequency, characteristics and clinical context used by lectures during classes. Data were analyzed using statistical and descriptive methods to determine the prevalence and quality of teaching content. 231 teaching sessions were surveyed. The inter-rater reliability was 81%. Lecturers mentioned topics of risk communication in 61.5% of teaching sessions (83.7% in surgery, 43.3% in internal medicine) but core biostatistics concepts were not discussed in more than 80% of these sessions. Important topics such as patient safety and preventable diseases were underrepresented. Risk communication was mainly taught in large-group, theoretical sessions and rarely with supplementary teaching material (7.4%). Students asked questions in 15.2% of courses, more often in surgery classes than in internal medicine. Statistical and clinical topics relevant for teaching risk communication to medical students are not only underrepresented but also minimally explained by lecturers. Supplementary material on risk communication is rarely provided to students during classes. High-resource demanding, small-group teaching formats are not necessarily interactive as students ask few questions.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0233682
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source Public Library of Science (PLoS) Journals Open Access; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Analysis
Biology and Life Sciences
Clinical decision making
Communication
Curricula
Decision making
Health risk communication
Health risks
Health services
Hospitals
Learning
Medical education
Medical personnel-patient relations
Medical schools
Medical students
Medicine
Medicine and Health Sciences
Patients
People and Places
Physical Sciences
Physicians
Psychosomatic medicine
Questions
Risk communication
Social Sciences
Statistical methods
Statistics
Students
Surgery
Teaching
Training
title What and how are students taught about communicating risks to patients? Analysis of a medical curriculum
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