Journal of Languages for Specific Purposes (Mar 2024)

FROM A SIMULATED PATIENT INTERVIEW TO A CASE PRESENTATION

  • Kata Eklics,
  • Judit Fekete

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 11
pp. 59 – 70

Abstract

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Medical communication skills are learned during undergraduate studies and residency programmes by future doctors through case presentations, medical interviews, and healthcare staff interactions. Approaches like peer tutoring, simulation-based education, and blended learning enhance these skills. Our study aims to draw attention to the significance of doctor-patient and doctor-doctor scenarios by presenting a course that facilitates sociopragmatic, pragmalinguistic, and code-switching skills that medical students need to successfully employ in future healthcare settings. We consider patient information, case presenting, and interviewing skills, as well as profound knowledge of medical language equally important elements. While highlighting the essential components of the doctor-patient discourse and revealing the students’ development of code-switching abilities, this article shares the results of a feedback survey completed by participants in a course entitled ‘History taking with actors; simulation practices in the mediskillslab’. We can see the gradual improvement in using medical terms, and the growing confidence of students presenting cases. The programme’s assessment approach, which provides constructive feedback from three perspectives—clinician, simulated patient, and communication instructor—helps the students pinpoint their areas for enhancement. Most students report no major difficulties in taking medical history by employing a simplified ‘patient-friendly’ language understandable to laypeople. However, when they intentionally choose a different code for reporting on their patients by using medical terms, younger students face challenges in creating a brief medical text. The most demanding task for senior participants proved to be delivering bad news; both emotionally and code-switch wise. Our study identifies these difficulties from history-taking simulations to case reports to raise awareness of levels of medical communication. As a conclusion, we believe that an early onset and gradual introduction of activities including history taking, case presentation, and breaking bad news should be incorporated into medical curricula to assist in the acquisition of highly professional, assertive, and empathetic communication skills by graduation.

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