Progress and divergence in palliative care education for medical students: A comparative survey of UK course structure, content, delivery, contact with patients and assessment of learning

Author:

Walker Steven123,Gibbins Jane4,Barclay Stephen5,Adams Astrid6,Paes Paul7,Chandratilake Madawa28,Gishen Faye19,Lodge Philip19,Wee Bee6

Affiliation:

1. Marie Curie Hospice, Hampstead, London, UK

2. Centre for Medical Education, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK

3. St Giles Medical, London, UK

4. Cornwall Hospice Care, Royal Cornwall Hospital Trust and Peninsula Medical School, Cornwall, UK

5. University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

6. Sir Michael Sobell House, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

7. Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

8. Faculty of Medicine, University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya, Sri Lanka

9. Royal Free Hospital, University College London, London, UK

Abstract

Background: Effective undergraduate education is required to enable newly qualified doctors to safely care for patients with palliative care and end-of-life needs. The status of palliative care teaching for UK medical students is unknown. Aim: To investigate palliative care training at UK medical schools and compare with data collected in 2000. Design: An anonymised, web-based multifactorial questionnaire. Settings/participants: Results were obtained from palliative care course organisers at all 30 medical schools in 2013 and compared with 23 medical schools (24 programmes) in 2000. Results: All continue to deliver mandatory teaching on ‘last days of life, death and bereavement’. Time devoted to palliative care teaching time varied (2000: 6–100 h, mean 20 h; 2013: 7–98 h, mean 36 h, median 25 h). Current palliative care teaching is more integrated. There was little change in core topics and teaching methods. New features include ‘involvement in clinical areas’, participation of patient and carers and attendance at multidisciplinary team meetings. Hospice visits are offered (22/24 (92%) vs 27/30 (90%)) although they do not always involve patient contact. There has been an increase in students’ assessments (2000: 6/24, 25% vs 2013: 25/30, 83%) using a mixture of formative and summative methods. Some course organisers lack an overview of what is delivered locally. Conclusion: Undergraduate palliative care training continues to evolve with greater integration, increased teaching, new delivery methods and wider assessment. There is a trend towards increased patient contact and clinical involvement. A minority of medical schools offer limited teaching and patient contact which could impact on the delivery of safe palliative care by newly qualified doctors.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

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