Curricular Reform in Serious Illness Communication and Palliative Care: Using Medical Students’ Voices to Guide Change

Author:

Reidy Jennifer A.,Brizzi Kate,Chan Stephanie H.ORCID,Day HollisORCID,Epstein Scott K.,Fischer Melissa,Garg Priya S.ORCID,Gosline Anna,Jaramillo Carolina,Livne Emma,Mitchell Suzanne,Morgan Sarah,Olmsted Molly W.,Stebbins Patricia,Stumpf Isabella,Vesel Tamara,Yeh Irene M.,Young Megan E.ORCID,Goldman Roberta E.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose To gather and leverage the voices of students to drive creation of required, integrated palliative care curricula within undergraduate medical education in Massachusetts, which is lacking in a majority of U.S. medical schools. Method The study was conducted by the Massachusetts Medical Schools’ Collaborative, a working group committed to ensuring all medical students in Massachusetts receive foundational training in serious illness communication (SIC) and palliative care. Eight focus groups (2 per participating medical school) were conducted during January–May 2021 and included a total of 50 students from Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Tufts University School of Medicine, and the UMass Chan Medical School. Data collected from focus groups were discussed and coded. Themes were identified using the immersion/crystallization qualitative data analysis approach. Results Six key themes emerged. Students viewed SIC as essential to high-quality medical practice regardless of specialty, and believed training in SIC skills and palliative care should be required in medical school curricula. Students preferred to learn and practice these skills using frameworks, particularly in real-world situations. Students recognized the expertise of palliative care specialists and described them as a scarce, often misunderstood resource in health care. Students reported it was mostly “luck” if they were included in family meetings and observed good role models. Finally, students desired practice in debriefing after difficult and emotional situations. Conclusions This study confirms long-standing themes on students’ experiences with SIC and palliative care topics, including feeling inadequately prepared to care for seriously ill patients as future physicians. Our study collected students’ perspectives as actionable data to develop recommendations for curricular change. Collaborative faculty also created recommendations based on the focus group data for immediate and ongoing SIC and palliative care curricular change in Massachusetts, which can apply to medical schools nationwide.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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