首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Graduate Medical Education >“Page Me if You Need Me”: The Hidden Curriculum of Attending-Resident Communication
【24h】

“Page Me if You Need Me”: The Hidden Curriculum of Attending-Resident Communication

机译:“如果需要我的话可以寻呼我”:参加者交流的隐性课程

获取原文
           

摘要

BackgroundDiscrepancies exist between what resident and attending physicians perceive as adequate supervision. We documented current practices in a university-based, categoric, internal medicine residency to characterize these discrepancies and the types of mixed messages that are communicated to residents, as well as to assess their potential effect on resident supervision and patient safety.MethodsWe surveyed residents and attending physicians separately about their current attitudes and behaviors regarding resident supervision. Both groups responded to 2 different measures of resident supervision: (1) 6 clinical vignettes that involved patient safety concerns, and (2) 9 frequently reported phrases communicated by attending physicians to residents before leaving the hospital during on-call admission days.ResultsThere were clear and substantial differences between the perceptions of resident and attending physicians about when the supervising attending physician should be notified in each of the 6 vignettes. For example, 85% of attending physicians reported they wanted to be notified of an unexpected pneumothorax that required chest tube placement, but only 31% of resident physicians said they would call their attending physician during those circumstances. Common phrases, such as “page me if you need me,” resulted in approximately 50% of residents reporting they would “rarely” or “never” call and another 41% reporting they would only “sometimes” call their attending physicians.ConclusionsOur study found that attending physicians reported they would want more frequent communication and closer supervision than routinely perceived by resident physicians. Although this discrepancy exists, commonly used phrases, such as “page me if you need me,” rarely resulted in a change in resident behavior, and attending physicians appeared to be aware of the ineffectiveness of these statements. These mixed messages may increase the difficulty of balancing the dual goals of appropriate attending supervision and progressive independence during residency training.
机译:背景技术住院医师和主治医师之间的差异存在于适当的监督之下。我们在以大学为基础的分类内科住院医师中记录了当前的做法,以表征这些差异和传达给居民的混合信息的类型,并评估其对居民监督和患者安全的潜在影响。分别就主治医生的当前态度和行为向主治医生咨询。两组均对居民监督采取了两种不同的措施:(1)6例涉及患者安全问题的临床小插曲,以及(2)9名经常报告的短语,这些短语是在随诊入院日之前出院前由主治医生传达给居民的。在六个小插曲的每一个中,住院医师和主治医师关于何时应通知主治医师的观念之间存在明显的实质性差异。例如,有85%的主治医师报告他们希望被告知需要胸管放置的意外气胸,但只有31%的住院医师表示会在这种情况下致电其主治医师。常见的短语,例如“如果需要我可以寻呼我”,导致大约50%的居民报告称他们会“很少”或“从不”打电话给其他居民,另有41%的居民报告说他们只会“有时”打电话给主治医生。发现主治医师报告说,他们希望比住院医师通常所感知的更加频繁的交流和更密切的监督。尽管存在这种差异,但是诸如“如果需要我的话给我寻呼”之类的常用短语很少会导致居民行为发生变化,并且主治医师似乎意识到这些陈述的无效性。这些混杂的信息可能会增加在居住培训期间平衡适当的参加监督和逐步独立的双重目标的难度。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号