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Journal Article

Citation

Fiedorowicz JG, Tate J, Miller AC, Franklin EM, Gourley R, Rosenbaum M. Acad. Psychiatry 2013; 37(6): 398-401.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, American Psychiatric Publishing)

DOI

10.1176/appi.ap.11110200

PMID

23703471

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Effective communication strategies are required to assess suicide risk. The authors determined whether a 2-hour simulated-patient activity during a psychiatry clerkship improved self-assessment of medical interviewing skills relevant to suicide risk-assessment. METHODS In the 2-hour simulated-patient intervention, at least one psychiatrist, a non-clinician communication expert, and a specifically-trained simulated patient worked with groups of 4-6 students to address student-identified challenges with patient encounters involving suicide risk-assessment. Six of twelve clerkships between July 2010 and October 2011 were assigned to this educational intervention in addition to a communications curriculum. RESULTS On a retrospective pre-post self-assessment, the 61 of 118 students assigned to the intervention group reported greater improvements in relevant skills. The process of discovering/responding to patients' feelings and identifying/addressing verbal and nonverbal cues specifically improved. CONCLUSION The psychiatry clerkship provides a unique opportunity to reinforce and develop communications skills with a formal, skills-based curriculum.


Language: en

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