@article{7073, author = {Mitchell A. Cahan and Anne C. Larkin and Susan Starr and Scott Wellman and Heather-Lyn Haley and Kate Sullivan and Shimul Shah and Michael Hirsh and Demetrius Litwin and Mark Quirk}, title = {A human factors curriculum for surgical clerkship students.}, abstract = {

HYPOTHESIS: Early introduction of a full-day human factors training experience into the surgical clerkship curriculum will teach effective communication skills and strategies to gain professional satisfaction from a career in surgery.

DESIGN: In pilot 1, which took place between July 1, 2007, and December 31, 2008, 50 students received training and 50 did not; all received testing at the end of the rotation for comparison of control vs intervention group performance. In pilot 2, a total of 50 students were trained and received testing before and after rotation to examine individual change over time.

SETTING: University of Massachusetts Medical School.

PARTICIPANTS: A total of 148 third-year medical students in required 12-week surgical clerkship rotations.

INTERVENTIONS: Full-day training with lecture and small-group exercises, cotaught by surgeons and educators, with focus on empathetic communication, time management, and teamwork skills.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Empathetic communication skill, teamwork, and patient safety attitudes and self-reported use of time management strategies.

RESULTS: Empathy scores were not higher for trained vs untrained groups in pilot 1 but improved from 2.32 to 3.45 on a 5-point scale (P < .001) in pilot 2. Students also were more likely to ask for the nurse's perspective and to seek agreement on an action plan after team communication training (pilot 1, f = 7.52, P = .007; pilot 2, t = 2.65, P = .01). Results were mixed for work-life balance, with some trained groups scoring significantly lower than untrained groups in pilot 1 and no significant improvement shown in pilot 2.

CONCLUSIONS: The significant increase in student-patient communication scores suggests that a brief focused presentation followed by simulation of difficult patient encounters can be successful. A video demonstration can improve interdisciplinary teamwork.

}, year = {2010}, journal = {Arch Surg}, volume = {145}, pages = {1151-7}, month = {12/2010}, issn = {1538-3644}, doi = {10.1001/archsurg.2010.252}, language = {eng}, }