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Learning patient-centredness with simulated/standardized patients: A realist review: BEME Guide No. 68

期刊

MEDICAL TEACHER
卷 45, 期 4, 页码 347-359

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0142159X.2022.2093176

关键词

Patient-centredness; healthcare professionals; healthcare learners; educational intervention; realist review; simulated patients; standardized patients

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This study examines how healthcare learners and professionals learn patient-centredness through interventions involving standardized patients (SPs) in different healthcare educational contexts. The results reveal that interventions with SPs create a safe learning environment, facilitate reflective practice, and enable collaborative learning. These interventions trigger mechanisms such as confidence, comfort, safety, self-reflection, awareness, comparing & contrasting perspectives, and combining and broadening perspectives. Overall, the study proposes a program theory for learning patient-centredness through interventions with SPs.
Background Given the positive outcomes of patient-centred care on health outcomes, future doctors should learn how to deliver patient-centred care. The literature describes a wide variety of educational interventions with standardized patients (SPs) that focus on learning patient-centredness. However, it is unclear which mechanisms are responsible for learning patient-centredness when applying educational interventions with SPs. Objective This study aims to clarify how healthcare learners and professionals learn patient-centredness through interventions involving SPs in different healthcare educational contexts. Methods A realist approach was used to focus on what works, for whom, in what circumstances, in what respect and why. Databases were searched through 2019. Nineteen papers were included for analysis. Through inductive and deductive coding, CIC'MO configurations were identified to build partial program theories. These CIC'MOs describe how Interventions with SPs change the Context (C -> C') such that Mechanisms (M) are triggered that are expected to foster patient-centredness as Outcome. Results Interventions with SPs create three contexts which are 'a safe learning environment,' 'reflective practice,' and 'enabling people to learn together.' These contexts trigger the following seven mechanisms: feeling confident, feeling a sense of comfort, feeling safe, self-reflection, awareness, comparing & contrasting perspectives, combining and broadening perspectives. A tentative final program theory with mechanisms belonging to three main learning components (cognitive, regulative metacognitive and affective) is proposed: Interventions with SPs create a safe learning environment (C') in which learners gain feelings of confidence, comfort and safety (affective M). This safe learning environment enables two other mutual related contexts in which learners learn together (C'), through comparing & contrasting, combining and broadening their perspectives (cognitive M) and in which reflective practice (C') facilitates self-reflection and awareness (metacognitive M) in order to learn patient-centeredness. Conclusion These insights offer educators ways to deliberately use interventions with SPs that trigger the described mechanisms for learning patient-centredness.

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