BMC Medical Education (Jul 2020)

Does a home-based interview with a chronically ill patient help medical students become more patient-centred? A randomised controlled trial

  • Michael Harris,
  • Anna-Lea Camenzind,
  • Rita Fankhauser,
  • Sven Streit,
  • Roman Hari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-020-02136-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background While patient-centred care improves patient outcomes, studies have shown that medical students become less patient-centred with time, so it is crucial to devise interventions that prevent this. We sought to determine whether first-year medical students who had a structured home-based interview with a chronically ill patient became more patient-centred than those who had a sham intervention. Methods This randomised controlled trial assigned first-year students from the University of Bern, Switzerland, to either an interview with a chronically ill patient at the patient’s home or to a sham comparator. We used the PPOS-D12 questionnaire to measure students’ levels of patient-centredness at baseline, and changes in these levels during their longitudinal primary care clerkship. Results A total of 317 students participated. Patient-centred attitudes increased during the study. A home-based interview with a chronically ill patient had no additional effect. Being female and having been exposed to patients before medical school were associated with being more patient-centred at baseline. Students were less patient-centred than their General Practitioner teachers. Conclusions A structured, home-based interview with a chronically ill patient did not change students’ patient-centred attitudes, so cannot be recommended as a way to influence those attitudes. However, patient-centred attitudes increased during the students’ first year of study, possibly because of their longitudinal primary care clerkship. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov reference: NCT03722810 , registered 29th October 2018.

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