Journal of palliative medicine
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Although there is poor communication about pain management between informal caregivers and hospice providers, little research has examined these interactions. ⋯ The propensity to use medical words during clinical communication with family caregivers is cautioned. In order to recognize the caregiver as a contributing team member, clinicians should limit the use of medical words, provide lay explanation alongside medical terminology, and use questions to check for understanding. More research is needed to determine assessment tools to capture the caregiver's level of understanding of medication and pain management protocol.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
An evaluation of interactive web-based curricula for teaching code status discussions.
Teaching resuscitation discussions to medical students and residents is time intensive and should be taught by teachers with competence in this area of clinical practice. There are plenty of data that these discussions are often inadequate, and that communication skills training, while time and faculty intensive, improves these conversations. The role of online instruction in teaching communication skills, such as resuscitation discussions, is not established. ⋯ This block randomized study of web-based curricula versus a written curriculum did not show differences in student performance in code status discussions. The optimal use of online communication training remains unclear and requires further investigation.