Teaching brief motivational interviewing to Year three medical students

Objectives  In 2005, the authors developed and tested a curriculum to teach Year 3 Yale University medical students a behaviour change counselling approach called ‘brief motivational interviewing’ (BMI). Brief motivational interviewing is a patient‐centred approach designed to promote changes in pat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical education 2007-02, Vol.41 (2), p.160-167
Hauptverfasser: Martino, Steve, Haeseler, Frederick, Belitsky, Richard, Pantalon, Michael, Fortin IV, Auguste H
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container_end_page 167
container_issue 2
container_start_page 160
container_title Medical education
container_volume 41
creator Martino, Steve
Haeseler, Frederick
Belitsky, Richard
Pantalon, Michael
Fortin IV, Auguste H
description Objectives  In 2005, the authors developed and tested a curriculum to teach Year 3 Yale University medical students a behaviour change counselling approach called ‘brief motivational interviewing’ (BMI). Brief motivational interviewing is a patient‐centred approach designed to promote changes in patient behaviour within the time constraints imposed by a busy medical practice. Methods  Standardised patients/instructors delivered the curriculum within a single 2‐hour training episode using a teaching acronym called ‘CHANGE’ to promote the students' learning. The authors used a pretest, post‐test and 4‐week follow‐up design to assess students' BMI skills (as measured by the Helpful Response Questionnaire), knowledge and attitudes toward the approach. Results  Students successfully increased their use of BMI‐consistent behaviours, primarily by increasing the frequency and depth of their reflections and by reducing the frequency with which they incorporated communication roadblocks and closed questions into their responses (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Students also showed increases in BMI knowledge, interest in the approach, confidence in their ability to use BMI, and commitment to incorporating BMI skills into their future medical practice (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Conclusions  The findings suggest that Year 3 medical students can learn basic BMI skills and knowledge and develop positive attitudes toward the approach within a relatively short period of time. The authors discuss the study's limitations and future directions for teaching students BMI.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1365-2929.2006.02673.x
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Brief motivational interviewing is a patient‐centred approach designed to promote changes in patient behaviour within the time constraints imposed by a busy medical practice. Methods  Standardised patients/instructors delivered the curriculum within a single 2‐hour training episode using a teaching acronym called ‘CHANGE’ to promote the students' learning. The authors used a pretest, post‐test and 4‐week follow‐up design to assess students' BMI skills (as measured by the Helpful Response Questionnaire), knowledge and attitudes toward the approach. Results  Students successfully increased their use of BMI‐consistent behaviours, primarily by increasing the frequency and depth of their reflections and by reducing the frequency with which they incorporated communication roadblocks and closed questions into their responses (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Students also showed increases in BMI knowledge, interest in the approach, confidence in their ability to use BMI, and commitment to incorporating BMI skills into their future medical practice (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Conclusions  The findings suggest that Year 3 medical students can learn basic BMI skills and knowledge and develop positive attitudes toward the approach within a relatively short period of time. 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Brief motivational interviewing is a patient‐centred approach designed to promote changes in patient behaviour within the time constraints imposed by a busy medical practice. Methods  Standardised patients/instructors delivered the curriculum within a single 2‐hour training episode using a teaching acronym called ‘CHANGE’ to promote the students' learning. The authors used a pretest, post‐test and 4‐week follow‐up design to assess students' BMI skills (as measured by the Helpful Response Questionnaire), knowledge and attitudes toward the approach. Results  Students successfully increased their use of BMI‐consistent behaviours, primarily by increasing the frequency and depth of their reflections and by reducing the frequency with which they incorporated communication roadblocks and closed questions into their responses (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Students also showed increases in BMI knowledge, interest in the approach, confidence in their ability to use BMI, and commitment to incorporating BMI skills into their future medical practice (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Conclusions  The findings suggest that Year 3 medical students can learn basic BMI skills and knowledge and develop positive attitudes toward the approach within a relatively short period of time. 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Brief motivational interviewing is a patient‐centred approach designed to promote changes in patient behaviour within the time constraints imposed by a busy medical practice. Methods  Standardised patients/instructors delivered the curriculum within a single 2‐hour training episode using a teaching acronym called ‘CHANGE’ to promote the students' learning. The authors used a pretest, post‐test and 4‐week follow‐up design to assess students' BMI skills (as measured by the Helpful Response Questionnaire), knowledge and attitudes toward the approach. Results  Students successfully increased their use of BMI‐consistent behaviours, primarily by increasing the frequency and depth of their reflections and by reducing the frequency with which they incorporated communication roadblocks and closed questions into their responses (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Students also showed increases in BMI knowledge, interest in the approach, confidence in their ability to use BMI, and commitment to incorporating BMI skills into their future medical practice (all P‐values ≤ 0.05). Conclusions  The findings suggest that Year 3 medical students can learn basic BMI skills and knowledge and develop positive attitudes toward the approach within a relatively short period of time. The authors discuss the study's limitations and future directions for teaching students BMI.</abstract><cop>Oxford, UK</cop><pub>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</pub><pmid>17269949</pmid><doi>10.1111/j.1365-2929.2006.02673.x</doi><tpages>8</tpages></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Education Source; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Adult
attitude of health personnel
Clinical Competence - standards
Communication
Curriculum
education
Education, Medical, Undergraduate - methods
Female
Humans
Interview, Psychological
interviews
Male
medical
Motivation
Program Development
Program Evaluation
students
Students, Medical
Teaching - methods
undergraduate/methods
title Teaching brief motivational interviewing to Year three medical students
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