Journal of palliative medicine
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Background: To build third-year medical students' serious illness communication skills, we implemented a structured communication tool-the VALUES tool-focused on patients' goals, values, and priorities and described students' experiences using this tool. Methods: Medical students participated in a social worker-led VALUES didactic and discussion with a patient on the palliative care consult service and, subsequently, completed an anonymous survey about their comfort with the VALUES tool and its usefulness for learning (5-point Likert scales). ⋯ The VALUES tool was rated highly in terms of usefulness (mean 4.5; standard deviation [SD] 0.7) and rated lower in terms of overall comfort (mean 3.7; SD 0.7). Conclusion: Our project explored the integration of a VALUES tool into medical student education, and we show that the tool is well rated by learners in terms of comfort and usefulness.
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Background: Pediatric residents lack training in expressing condolences to bereaved families after a child's death. We previously developed a novel curriculum that improved residents' comfort with expressing condolences, and now we report assessment of the longitudinal impact of this curriculum on residents' practices of condolence expression. Methods: We applied Kern's 6-step approach to develop, implement, and evaluate a condolence expression curriculum. ⋯ Residents reported an increase in their practice of expressing condolences following participation in the curriculum, as well as appreciation for the value of the intervention. Conclusion: A condolence expression curriculum has potential to increase residents' practice of condolence expression to bereaved families over time. Future work will focus on the impact of curricular dissemination across pediatric residency programs.
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Background: Hospice and palliative medicine is important in the education of pediatric residents. Little is known about if and how residents' learnings during a pediatric palliative care elective fulfill core competencies and Pediatrics subcompetencies as set forth by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and published subspecialty competencies for residents in pediatric hospice and palliative medicine (pHPM). Objectives: To evaluate what residents are learning on a four-week pediatric palliative care elective rotation at a single institution and how these learnings fulfill ACGME and pHPM competencies. ⋯ These codes were mapped to all six ACGME core competencies and mapped to most Pediatric subcompetencies with the exception of performing a physical examination, organizing and prioritizing patients, diagnostic evaluation, and community and population health. Codes mapped to most pHPM competencies with the exception of two symptom-based competencies, malignant bowel obstruction and severe fatigue. Conclusions: Residents' written reflections following a pediatric palliative care elective rotation demonstrated robust learnings that fulfill many core, specialty, and subspecialty competencies, particularly those that relate to patient- and family-centered care, communication, professionalism, and systems-based practice.