1.Correlations of Communication and Interpersonal Skills between Medical Students and Residents.
Wan Beom PARK ; Sae Ra PHYO ; Eun Young JANG ; Seok Hoon KANG ; Sun Jung MYUNG ; Hee Young SHIN ; Yoon Seong LEE ; Jwa Seop SHIN
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2010;22(4):269-274
PURPOSE: Medical students' communication and interpersonal skills can be evaluated by standardized patients in a clinical performance examination (CPX). The purpose of this study is to investigate which communication and interpersonal skills are more closely correlated between medical students and residents. METHODS: This study included 2nd-year residents in 2009 who took the eight-station CPX as 4th-year medical students in 2006. In-patients who were cared for by the residents were asked the seven items related to interpersonal and communication skills. The correlation between the scores of these seven items in the 2006 CPX and the scores in the 2009 patient survey was evaluated. RESULTS: Twenty-six residents, 11 in medical wards and 15 in surgical wards, participated in the study. The medical students' total scores tended to be correlated with the residents' scores (r=0.381, p=0.055). There was significant correlation between the scores for students and residents for 'Explaining more explicably' (r=0.470, p=0.015), and marginally significant correlation (r=0.385, p=0.052) for 'Listening attentively.' There was no significant correlation for the other five items. CONCLUSION: 'Explaining more explicably' and 'Listening attentively', these skills were more closely correlated between medical students and residents. These basic communication skills should be included in graduate or licensing evaluations.
Clinical Competence
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Humans
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Interpersonal Relations
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Licensure
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Physician-Patient Relations
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Students, Medical
2.Experience of Teaching a Class with a Film: Cognitive Changes with Regard to HIV.
Wan Beom PARK ; Eun Young JANG ; Mi Sung SEO ; Sae Ra PHYO ; Seok Hoon KANG ; Sun Jung MYUNG ; Nam Joong KIM ; Myoung Don OH ; Hee Young SHIN ; Jwa Seop SHIN
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2011;23(1):27-32
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to describe our experience of a class, using a film that deals with the social issues of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and the results of surveys before and after the class. METHODS: One hundred fifty-six second-year medical students were surveyed with self-questionnaires (9-point Likert scale) before, immediately after, and 2 years after a class that viewed a film ('Philadelphia', 1993). The same survey, comprising 4 items, was administered to 81 non-medical students in the same university. RESULTS: In 156 medical students, 153 (98%) answered the questionnaires. Before the class, there was no significant difference between medical and non-medical students with regard to the cognition of social isolation of HIV-infected persons (4.13 vs. 4.43, p=0.307). immediately after the class, medical student' cognition changed significantly in the positive direction on all items, irrespective of age, sex, and course grade. Two years after the class, this positive effect remained significant on 2 items: 'social isolation of HIV-infected persons' and 'casual contact with an HIV-infected person.' CONCLUSION: A film can be used to reinforce medical education in the affective domain.
Cognition
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Education, Medical
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HIV
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Humans
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Motion Pictures as Topic
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Social Isolation
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Students, Medical
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Surveys and Questionnaires