Preclinical Medical Students’ Diverse Educational and Emotional Responses to a Required Hospice Experience

Author:

Tse Chung Sang1,Morrison Laura J.2,Ellman Matthew S.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

2. Yale Palliative Care Program, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA

Abstract

Background: Physicians’ lack of comfort and skill in communicating about hospice care results in deficits and delays in hospice referrals. Preclinical exposure to hospice may lay a foundation to improve medical students’ knowledge and comfort with hospice care. Objective: To understand how preclinical medical student (MS)-2s respond both educationally and emotionally to a required hospice care experience (HCE). Design: Accompanied by hospice clinicians, MS-2s spent 3 hours seeing inpatient or home hospice patients followed by a 1-hour debriefing. Students submitted written reflections to e-mailed educational and emotional prompts. Setting/patients: Two hundred and two MS-2s from 2 academic cohorts completed the HCE at 1 of 2 hospice sites. Measurements: Written reflective responses were analyzed qualitatively, where salient themes extracted and responses were coded. Results: Ninety-two students submitted 175 responses to Prompt #1 (educational impact) and 85 students entered 85 responses to prompt #2 (emotional impact) of the HCE. Eleven themes were identified for prompt #1, most frequently focusing on hospice services and goals and hospice providers’ attitudes and skills. Prompt #2 elicited a diverse spectrum of emotional responses, spanning positive and negative emotions. Most often, students reported “no specified emotional reaction,” “sad/depressed,” “difficult /challenging,” “heartened/encouraged,” and “mixed emotions.” Conclusion: In an HCE, preclinical students reported learning core aspects of hospice care and experiencing a broad spectrum of emotional responses. These findings may assist educators in the planning of HCEs for preclinical students, including debriefing sessions with skilled clinicians and opportunities for triggered reflection.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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