BMC Medical Education | |
Dunno if you've any plans for the future: medical student indirect questioning in simulated oncology interviews | |
Research Article | |
Pascal Singy1  Alexandre Berney1  Céline Bourquin1  Friedrich Stiefel1  | |
[1] Psychiatric Liaison Service, Lausanne University Hospital, 1011, Les Allières, Lausanne-CHUV, Switzerland; | |
关键词: Medical Student; Communication Skill; Video Screening; Simulated Patient; Communication Skill Training; | |
DOI : 10.1186/1472-6920-12-8 | |
received in 2011-08-31, accepted in 2012-03-02, 发布年份 2012 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundThis exploratory study investigated the motives of medical students (N = 63) for using indirect questions of the type I don't know if [you have already heard about chemotherapies], I don't know how [you are], or I don't know what [you do for a living] in simulated patient interviews during a communication skills course.MethodsI don't know questions (IDK-Qs) were observed during the initial evaluation of students' communication skills; they were systematically identified through video screening and subjected to a qualitative content and discourse analysis considering their context, their content, their intent and their effect on the simulated patients. To evaluate the specificity of medical students' IDK-Qs, the data were compared with a data set of oncologists (N = 31) conducting simulated patient interviews in the context of a Communication Skills Training (CST).ResultsDuring the interviews, 41.3% of the students asked 1-6 IDK-Qs. The IDK-Qs were attributed to three content categories: medical/treatment questions (N = 24); lifestyle/psychosocial questions (N = 18); and "inviting questions" questions (N = 11). Most of the IDK-Qs had an exploratory function (46/53), with simulated patients providing detailed responses or asking for more information (36/53). IDK-Qs were rare in the oncologist sample compared to the student sample (5 vs. 53 occurrences).ConclusionsIDK-Qs showed a question design difference between medical students and oncologists in simulated patient interviews. Among other reasons for this difference, the possible function of IDK-Qs as a protective linguistic strategy and marker for psychological discomfort is discussed.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© Bourquin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2012
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202311090308145ZK.pdf | 313KB | download |
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