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Enhancing Empathy in Medical Communication Through Perspective-Taking

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Patient Satisfaction
Interventions
Behavioral: Perspective taking instruction
Registration Number
NCT00861991
Lead Sponsor
George Washington University
Brief Summary

Background: Empathy is critical to clinician-patient communication and patient outcomes. Perspective-taking, an intervention demonstrated in other contexts to induce empathy, has never been studied in a medical context. As a first step in evaluating its potential clinical value, the studies described below assess perspective taking in a series of clinical skills examinations. These examinations are simulated clinical encounters: students encounter and are evaluated by standardized patients (SPs)--actors trained to take on patient roles. Though not real clinical encounters, clinical skills examinations have been demonstrated to test clinical competency well enough to be incorporated into the licensure examination of the National Board of Medical Examiners.

Objective: To assess if perspective-taking improves the satisfaction of standardized patients in three clinical skills examinations.

Hypothesis: Students receiving a perspective taking intervention will receive better standardized patient satisfaction scores than control students.

Design and Setting: Three randomized, controlled studies. Studies 1 and 3: Junior medical students(N = 503), 6-station clinical skills examination. Study 2: physician assistant students (N = 105), 3-station clinical skills examination.

Intervention: The intervention students received a perspective-taking instruction prior to their examination asking them to put themselves in their "patients" shoes and to imagine what they were thinking and feeling. The control students received standard pre-examination instructions. Simulated patients were blind to study condition. Main Outcome Measure: Simulated patient satisfaction scores.

Detailed Description

These studies assess the interaction of students and simulated patients (actors)--no real patients were involved.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
608
Inclusion Criteria
  • All third year medical and first and second year physician assistant students, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences
Exclusion Criteria
  • None

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Perspective taking interventionPerspective taking instructionStudents were given an instruction to take the perspectives of their standardized patients
ControlPerspective taking instructionStudents given standard instructions
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
standardized patient satisfaction
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

George Washington University School of Medicine

🇺🇸

Washington, District of Columbia, United States

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