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Discussing Death and Dying: An End of Life Curriculum to Empower Residents

Vanderbilt University Medical Center logo

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Status

Completed

Conditions

Care, Palliative
Education, Medical
Medicine, Palliative
Education, Medical, Graduate

Treatments

Behavioral: CELA Session
Behavioral: Facilitated Group Session

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will evaluate how the educational intervention utilized affects pediatric resident comfort level with EOL discussions.

Full description

One of the most challenging roles a physician can serve is delivering life altering and/or bad news to patients and their families, and yet this skill is not widely taught to physicians. A survey from 2003 of pediatric residents found that not only was there minimal education and training in this area, but that they felt there was no natural improvement in their skills from the first to third year of training. It has also been shown that the art of eliciting a patient or family's concerns about death and responding to them is felt to be poorly taught. Worse, residents have indicated that a hidden curriculum in medicine seems to indicate that there is no value to these conversations at all. Residents are not the only stakeholders involved who have expressed concern with this reality. Parents of pediatric patients have repeatedly reported wanting increased sensitivity and clarity during sharing of life-altering information. Up to 75% of parents have reported a negative experience involving end of life (EOL) discussions, and cited inexperience, lack of comfort in communication, and a lack of knowledge as contributing factors to their negative experiences. Less than 18% of students and residents report receiving formal education in EOL discussions, despite the fact that 90% or more of residents have identified caring for those dying as part of a physician's responsibilities. Of residents who do get experience with EOL discussions, less than 2/3 receive feedback. Some residencies, such as internal medicine, have recognized the need for formal instruction on how to have EOL discussions is needed and have implemented formal programs to answer it, and it has even become a standard expectation for many fellowships. Formal education regarding EOL has also become a standard expectation for many fellowships, including pediatric neonatology, intensive care, and hematology/oncology. Despite the evidence that there is need for formal intervention and education regarding EOL care, there has been little advancement towards implementing a formal curriculum in pediatric residency programs. Review of the literature demonstrates that only one study has developed a formal curriculum involving a method called SPIKES (Setting, Perception, Involvement, Knowledge, Empathy, and Summary) that targets pediatric residents. The initial data from this study is promising and indicates increased comfort level in residents. However, to date no study has evaluated if the method of instruction affects the resident education, an important consideration as some interventions (ex. standardized patients) are more costly and time consuming than others (ex. facilitator guided small group sessions).

Enrollment

37 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Post Graduate Year (PGY) 2 or PGY-3 resident participating in the already-required Advocacy rotation at Monroe Carrell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt
  • Availability to participate in self reflection essays and simulated patient case
  • English speaking

Exclusion criteria

  • Medical students, PGY-1, PGY-4 or PGY-5 residents, fellows or learners not participating in the already-required Advocacy rotation
  • Inability to participate in self reflection essays and simulated patient case
  • Non-English speaking

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

37 participants in 3 patient groups

Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Those in the control group (CG) will write a pre and post-study reflection essay discussing their experiences with end of life discussions.
Facilitated Group Session
Experimental group
Description:
Participants in Facilitated Group Session (previously called Intervention Group 1) will watch a pre-recorded video describing the SPIKES model and then take part of a facilitated guided group session reviewing the model and group interview of standardized/simulated patient encounter.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Facilitated Group Session
CELA Session
Experimental group
Description:
Participants in the CELA Session (previously called Intervention Group 2) will watch a pre-recorded video describing the SPIKES model and then participate in an individualized standardized/simulated patient scenario that will be filmed at the Center for Experiential Learning and Assessment (CELA).
Treatment:
Behavioral: CELA Session

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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