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1.
Acad Med ; 99(3): 296-303, 2024 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38039983

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: The notion of physician invulnerability to illness contributes to the ongoing marginalization of physicians with personal experiences of illness and complicates professional identity development in medical learners. As such, physician self-disclosure of lived experiences as patients has seen an increasing role in medical education. Existing literature, centered on mental health, has characterized the positive effect of physician discussion of experience with mental illness on medical students and residents. However, the ways learners process and understand physician illness stories beyond this context and their use in education remain unclear. This study aimed to explore undergraduate medical students' perspectives on physician illness discussions of both physical and mental illness, including their perceptions of its use as a pedagogical tool. METHOD: This qualitative study followed an interpretive descriptive design using activity theory as a sensitizing concept. Semistructured interviews with medical students were conducted between January and April 2022 at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The authors analyzed transcripts using reflexive thematic analysis. RESULTS: Twenty-one medical students participated in interviews. Although rare, self-disclosure conversations occurred across varied settings and addressed diverse aspects of illness experiences. Discussions involved teaching of pathophysiology, career advice, and wellness guidance. Five themes were developed: the opposition of physicianhood, patienthood, and situating the learner identity; invisibility and stigmatization of physician illness; impact of preceptor stories on learners' relationship with medicine; challenging the "rules" of physicianhood; and situating self-disclosure in medical education. CONCLUSIONS: Students strongly appreciated physician self-disclosure conversations. Self-disclosure can act as an effective pedagogical tool by fostering expansive learning among medical students. Further research is necessary to explore physician perspectives and supports for self-disclosure in education.


Asunto(s)
Educación de Pregrado en Medicina , Educación Médica , Estudiantes de Medicina , Humanos , Revelación , Aprendizaje , Estudiantes de Medicina/psicología , Ontario
2.
CMAJ Open ; 11(5): E859-E868, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37751921

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Although clinical empathy - the ability of a physician to understand a patient's illness experience, communicate this understanding and act collaboratively to create a treatment plan - provides substantial benefits to both physicians and patients, medical students typically experience a decline in empathy during training. The primary objective of this study was to generate a model of clinical empathy grounded in the perspectives of people with chronic illness living in Canada, to promote empathy-focused curricular development in Canadian medical education. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative focus group study using a constructivist grounded theory approach. We recruited adults (age ≥ 18 yr) with chronic illness who had recently seen a physician in Canada from virtual support groups. Six semistructured virtual focus groups with 3-5 participants each were scheduled between June and September 2021. We coded the transcripts using the constant comparative method, allowing for the construction of an overarching theory. RESULTS: Twenty patients (17 women and 3 men) participated in the focus groups; 1 group had 2 participants because 1 participant failed to appear. The majority of participants (14 [70%]) had at least a college degree. The mean rating for overall satisfaction with the Canadian health care system was 5.4/10.0 (median 5.0). The emergent theory showed that the perceived presence of physician empathy engendered positive internal processing by patients, leading to increased health care efficacy and enhanced mental health outcomes. Negative patient processing in response to the perceived absence of empathy led to reduced quality of health care delivery (e.g., ineffective referrals and more appointments), increased use of health care resources, disruptions in patients' personal lives, and negative physical and mental health outcomes. INTERPRETATION: Clinical empathy can have life-altering impacts on patients, and its absence may increase resource use. As empathy involves understanding patients' lived experiences, any valid intervention to improve clinical empathy must be informed by patient perspectives.

3.
Acad Med ; 98(5): 577, 2023 05 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37146565
4.
J Patient Exp ; 9: 23743735221117366, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35936513

RESUMEN

Primary care physicians (PCPs) and patients identified body image conversations to be difficult but necessary. As first points of contact in the healthcare system, PCPs are ideal candidates for addressing body image concerns. Through latent thematic analysis of 12 interviews, this paper explores patient preferences with body image conversations in primary care. We identified challenges that patients faced in sharing body image concerns, expectations they hold for physicians, and suggested potential areas of future research and ways to improve care.

5.
Eur Radiol ; 32(3): 1477-1495, 2022 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34545445

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to impact clinical practice and healthcare delivery. AI is of particular significance in radiology due to its use in automatic analysis of image characteristics. This scoping review examines stakeholder perspectives on AI use in radiology, the benefits, risks, and challenges to its integration. METHODS: A search was conducted from 1960 to November 2019 in EMBASE, PubMed/MEDLINE, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, and grey literature. Publications reflecting stakeholder attitudes toward AI were included with no restrictions. RESULTS: Commentaries (n = 32), surveys (n = 13), presentation abstracts (n = 8), narrative reviews (n = 8), and a social media study (n = 1) were included from 62 eligible publications. These represent the views of radiologists, surgeons, medical students, patients, computer scientists, and the general public. Seven themes were identified (predicted impact, potential replacement, trust in AI, knowledge of AI, education, economic considerations, and medicolegal implications). Stakeholders anticipate a significant impact on radiology, though replacement of radiologists is unlikely in the near future. Knowledge of AI is limited for non-computer scientists and further education is desired. Many expressed the need for collaboration between radiologists and AI specialists to successfully improve patient care. CONCLUSIONS: Stakeholder views generally suggest that AI can improve the practice of radiology and consider the replacement of radiologists unlikely. Most stakeholders identified the need for education and training on AI, as well as collaborative efforts to improve AI implementation. Further research is needed to gain perspectives from non-Western countries, non-radiologist stakeholders, on economic considerations, and medicolegal implications. KEY POINTS: Stakeholders generally expressed that AI alone cannot be used to replace radiologists. The scope of practice is expected to shift with AI use affecting areas from image interpretation to patient care. Patients and the general public do not know how to address potential errors made by AI systems while radiologists believe that they should be "in-the-loop" in terms of responsibility. Ethical accountability strategies must be developed across governance levels. Students, residents, and radiologists believe that there is a lack in AI education during medical school and residency. The radiology community should work with IT specialists to ensure that AI technology benefits their work and centres patients.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Radiología , Predicción , Humanos , Radiografía , Radiólogos
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