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1.
Journal of the Japan Society of Acupuncture and Moxibustion ; : 204-211, 2014.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-376975

ABSTRACT

[Objective]In recent years, communication skills have been recognized as an essential competence for acupuncturists. This study proposes to develop a scale for measuring the medical communication skills of acupuncturists.<BR>[Materials and Methods]A questionnaire of 20 items was used to measure medical communication skills. These items were adopted from a concept analysis conducted in a previous study.<BR>Cronbach's alpha was used to examine the scale's reliability. The scale's validity was examined by correlation analysis and multiple regression analysis comparisons with normal communication skills subscale scores (ENDCOREs, Encode, Decode, Control, Regulate) and a Japanese version of characteristic trait anxiety scores (STAI, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory).<BR>[Results]Factor analysis, using a principal extraction method and promax rotation, was conducted on responses from 443students and therapists. As a result, the original 20 items were reduced to 16, and the following three factors were extracted:I. Acceptance of patients and self-control;II. Appropriate explanation to patients;and III. Understanding of patient's feelings. These three factors had high degrees of internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha =.872 -.892).<BR>The scores of the three factors correlated significantly with the scores of the six factors of ENDCORE, and with the anxiety scores. Although the results of multiple regression analysis showed that each factor of ENDCORE explained the three factors, the anxiety scores did not influence medical communication skills. The scores for the three factors correlated significantly with self-evaluation scores of medical interview skill. In addition, these three factors were affected by the degree of clinical experience.<BR>[Conclusion]These results suggest that this scale may be a reliable instrument for assessing medical communication skills among Japanese acupuncturists.

2.
Medical Education ; : 367-370, 2011.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-374460

ABSTRACT

1)For 3 years, we have asked fifth–year medical students what they consider an ideal physician to be and what they think is required to become one.<br>2)They considered an ideal physician to be holistic, honest, mindful, and caring. Some students also wanted to themselves be role models for other physicians and students.<br>3)To be an ideal physician, many students wanted to learn from role models.However, some students wanted to avoid being influenced by "bad physicians," suggesting the impact of a hidden curriculum. On the whole, students sought experiences for personal growth and for improving practical skills in communication and interviewing. Such knowledge may help in medical education.

3.
Medical Education ; : 171-174, 2009.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-362677

ABSTRACT

1) We used using educational portfolios to investigate changes in the feelings of fifth-year medical students during 1-week outpatient clinical training.2) Negative feelings were most often expressed on the first day. Gradually, however, positive feelings were expressed more often, and the number of positive feelings expressed was significantly higher on the final day.3) Our investigation suggests that outpatient clinical training motivates medical students. They reviewed their practical training with their portfolios. In addition, the instructors could use the portfolios to understand the changes in students' feelings. We hope that educational portfolios will prove useful for setting new educational objectives.

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