Self-evaluation of doctor-patient communication ability of pediatric residents and investigation on the training needs of them
10.3760/cma.j.cn116021-20191226-00714
- VernacularTitle:儿科住培医师医患沟通能力自我评价及培训需求调查
- Author:
Xiujuan WANG
1
;
Jiayu YAN
;
Aihua WANG
;
Tongxin HAN
;
Liping JIAO
;
Muhan LI
;
Yi XIONG
Author Information
1. 国家儿童医学中心首都医科大学附属北京儿童医院教育处,北京 100045
- Keywords:
Pediatric residents;
Medical humanities;
Doctor-patient communication;
Training courses
- From:
Chinese Journal of Medical Education Research
2021;20(12):1476-1479
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To investigate the current status of doctor-patient communication of pediatric residents, and to explore the specific demand of communication skills training in clinical practice.Methods:A self-made questionnaire was conducted to investigate 77 residents taking standardized residency training of pediatrics in Beijing Children's Hospital training base, including basic information, self-satisfaction of communication ability and the needs of doctor-patient communication courses, etc. SPSS 22.0 statistical software was used for data processing and analysis.Results:In terms of the doctor-patient communication ability, the results showed that the satisfaction degree of pediatric resident surgeons was higher than that of pediatric resident physicians (78.9% vs. 58.5%, P=0.108) and the satisfaction degree of high-seniority residents was higher than that of low-seniority residents (78.6% vs. 62.5%, P=0.330; 78.6% vs. 58.9%, P=0.278). Besides, the importance of communication objectives and the degree of difficulty were sorted in order, and the top three were family members, superior and children for importance, and family members, children and nurses for difficulty, respectively. The main reasons of difficult communication included heavy work (41.6%) and lack of communication skills (46.7%), with no statistical difference between different majors and seniorities ( P >0.05). More than 80% residents agreed that effective doctor-patient communication could promote the clinical work. The lower of seniority, the higher demands for the class time allocation and teaching frequency of doctor-patient communication training courses. Conclusion:Pediatric residents have a good cognition of medical doctor-patient communication. There are some obvious communication problems in pediatric physicians and low-seniority pediatric residents. Therefore, it's necessary to adjust courses according to different majors and seniorities, so as to improve the training quality, thereby promoting the clinical work and reform of medical education.