Educational Techniques Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of a Structured, Home-based Interview With a Patient With a Chronic Illness on First-year Medical Students' Patient-centredness: a Randomised Controlled Trial.
NCT number | NCT03722810 |
Other study ID # | 1 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | September 28, 2018 |
Est. completion date | June 20, 2019 |
Verified date | September 2020 |
Source | University of Bern |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Background
Doctors are regarded as professionals, and specific teaching on professional behaviour is
considered important in many countries. For medical students, early patient contact
experiences were found to be an important way of learning about professionalism, and learning
activities promoting critical reflection were particularly effective. Medical students
consider that patient-centredness is one of the most important aspects of medical
professionalism, and the PPOS questionnaire has been used extensively in measuring the
attitudes of medical students towards patient-centredness. The PPOS-D12 questionnaire is a
validated German version of that questionnaire.
The study aim is to assess how a structured, in-depth, home-based interview with a patient
with a chronic illness affects first-year medical students' patient-centredness.
Methods
In this randomised controlled trial, medical students who are in the first year of their
studies at the University of Bern will be randomised to either seeing a patient with a
chronic illness for a structured, in-depth interview in their own home (the intervention), or
to reading an educational document that gives information about consultation skills (the sham
comparator).
Students will complete the PPOS-D12 survey before and after the interventions, so that
changes in their scores can be calculated, and the mean scores of the two groups compared.
Secondary outcomes will be the effect of students' gender and prior exposure to chronic
illness in the participant or her/his close relatives and friends on their PPOS-D12 scores. A
nested study will measure the strength of association between the GP teachers' own levels of
patient/doctor-centredness and changes in their students' levels over the year.
Discussion
This research will consider the effect of an in-depth, structured interview with a patient
with a chronic illness on changes in first-year medical students' levels of
patient-centredness. There is existing evidence that medical students' levels of
patient-centredness reduce over their student years, and this study will contribute to an
understanding of how this reduction can be minimised or reversed.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 317 |
Est. completion date | June 20, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | June 20, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Medical students who are in the first year of their studies (their first Bachelor year) at the University of Bern, Switzerland. Exclusion Criteria: - None |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Switzerland | Berner Institut für Hausarztmedizin (BIHAM) | Bern | Kanton Bern |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Bern |
Switzerland,
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* Note: There are 22 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Correlation Between GP Teachers' Patient-centredness and Changes in Levels of Their Students Levels of Patient-centredness, as Assessed by the PPOS-D12 Questionnaire. | A nested study measured the strength of association between the GP teachers' own levels of patient-centredness (at end of students' primary care attachment) and changes in their own students' levels over the year (from baseline, i.e. start of academic year, to end of primary care attachment, up to 12 months), as measured by their respective PPOS-D12 scores (PPOS-D12 change for the students, PPOS-D12 score for their GP teachers). PPOS-D12 scale scores can vary from a mean score per question of 1 (most doctor-centred) to 6 (most patient-centred). We used the Pearson correlation coefficient to measure the association between GP teachers' PPOS-D12 scores and changes in their students' scores. |
GP teachers: end of primary care attachment. Students: Between study start, 28th September 2018 and study completion, June 20, 2019, approximately 9 months. | |
Primary | Changes in Medical Students' Patient-centredness as Assessed by the PPOS-D12 Questionnaire | Change in students' PPOS-D12 scores from base-line (at the start of the academic year) to the end of their year-long primary care attachment. The PPOS-D12 is the validated German-language version of the Patient-Provider Orientation Scale (Kiessling C, Fabry G, Rudolf Fischer M, et al., 2014), a self-completed questionnaire to assess patient-centredness among medical students. PPOS-D12 scale scores can vary from a mean score per question of 1 (most doctor-centred) to 6 (most patient-centred). For the primary outcome measure, to adjust for a difference in baseline PPOS-D12 scores between the two intervention groups, and after exploration of the data suggested that the effect of the baseline scores was linear, we compared the mean difference in the study start and end PPOS-D12 scores for the active and sham intervention groups using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). |
Between study start, 28th September 2018 and study completion, June 20, 2019, approximately 9 months. | |
Secondary | The Effect of Students' Gender on Their Levels of Patient-centredness as Assessed by the PPOS-D12 Questionnaire | The effect of students' gender (female/male) on their levels of patient-centredness, as measured by their PPOS-D12 questionnaire administered before the intervention (at start of academic year). PPOS-D12 scale scores can vary from a mean score per question of 1 (most doctor-centred) to 6 (most patient-centred). To measure secondary outcomes, we used linear regression to determine the effect of students' baseline characteristics on PPOS-D12 scores before the intervention (at start of academic year). |
At baseline (start of academic year). | |
Secondary | The Effect of Students Having Previously Studied Another Subject as an Undergraduate. | The effect of students' previous experience (presence or absence of previous university degrees) on their levels of patient-centredness, as measured by their PPOS-D12 questionnaire administered before the intervention (at start of academic year). PPOS-D12 scale scores can vary from a mean score per question of 1 (most doctor-centred) to 6 (most patient-centred). To measure secondary outcomes, we used linear regression to determine the effect of students' baseline characteristics on PPOS-D12 scores before the intervention (at start of academic year). |
At baseline (start of academic year). | |
Secondary | The Effect of Students' Prior Exposure to Chronic Illness on Their Levels of Patient-centredness as Assessed by the PPOS-D12 Questionnaire. | The effect of students' prior exposure to chronic illness (presence or absence of experience of serious chronic illness in the participant, a relative or a close friend) on their levels of patient-centredness, as measured by their PPOS-D12 questionnaire administered before the intervention (at start of academic year). PPOS-D12 scale scores can vary from a mean score per question of 1 (most doctor-centred) to 6 (most patient-centred). To measure secondary outcomes, we used linear regression to determine the effect of students' baseline characteristics on PPOS-D12 scores before the intervention (at start of academic year). |
At baseline (start of academic year). |
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