Early Clinical Exposure to Geriatric Psychiatry and Medical Students’ Interest in Caring for Older Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial

•In this study we hypothesize that early clinical exposure to elderly patients’ care could increase medical students’ interest in caring for older adults during their Medical future career.•Medical students randomized to geriatric psychiatry exposure was associated with increased in “comfort in work...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of geriatric psychiatry 2019-07, Vol.27 (7), p.745-751
Hauptverfasser: Pokrzywko, Klara, Torres-Platas, Susana Gabriela, Abdool, Petal S., Nassim, Marouane, Semeniuk, Trent, Moussa, Yara, Moussaoui, Ghizlane, Leon, Chloe, Baici, Wayne, Wilkins-Ho, Michael, Blackburn, Paul, Friedland, Jess, Nair, N.P. Vasavan, Looper, Karl, Segal, Marilyn, Woo, Tricia, Bruneau, Marie-Andrée, Rajji, Tarek K., Rej, Soham
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•In this study we hypothesize that early clinical exposure to elderly patients’ care could increase medical students’ interest in caring for older adults during their Medical future career.•Medical students randomized to geriatric psychiatry exposure was associated with increased in “comfort in working with geriatric patients and their families•We believe our results may help inform the design of medical school curricula in preparation for an increasingly aging population in America and worldwide. In the next 25 years, the population aged 65 and older will nearly double in many countries, with few new doctors wishing to care for older adults. The authors hypothesize that early clinical exposure to elderly patient care could increase student interest in caring for older adults during their future career. The authors conducted a pragmatic medical education randomized controlled trial (RCT) at the Jewish General Hospital and the Douglas Mental Health Institute, McGill University, in Montreal, Canada. Third-year medical students undergoing their mandatory 16-week half-time clerkship rotation in psychiatry were randomly assigned to the equivalent of 2–4 weeks of full-time exposure to clinical geriatric psychiatry (n = 84). Being randomly assigned to geriatric psychiatry exposure (n = 44 of 84) was associated with increased “comfort in working with geriatric patients and their families” at 16-week follow-up (59.1% versus 37.5%, χ2 (1) = 3.9; p = 0.05). However, there was no significant association found between geriatric psychiatry exposure and change “in interest in caring for older adults,” or change in “interest in becoming a geriatric psychiatrist.” The results of this pragmatic education RCT suggest that exposing third-year medical students to 2–4 weeks of geriatric psychiatry did not increase their interest to care for older adults or become a geriatric psychiatrist. However, it did increase their comfort level in working with older adults and their families. However, more research is necessary to identify potential interventions that could inspire and increase medical student interest in caring for older adults as part of their future careers.
ISSN:1064-7481
1545-7214
DOI:10.1016/j.jagp.2019.03.004