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What Have Medical Students Learned from Bedside Learning in Hospices?
Palliative Care Research ; : 229-238, 2017.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-378920
ABSTRACT
<p>

Aim:

We investigated what medical students learned on the clinical clerkship in our hospice and how their images of hospice care were changed, with self-reported questionnaires.

Methods:

Descriptions given in the contents were analyzed using a content analysis method based on Berelson’s methodology. A total of 20 students who participated in the program responded.

Results:

From their responses, 212 descriptions were extracted and 59 codes elicited. The codes were inductively classified and categorized based on content similarities. Eleven categories were generated “care for quality of life of patients and families,” “characteristics and effects of palliative care” “practical approaches to end-of-life medicine,” “hospices’ positions in the healthcare system” “development of trust-based relationships with patients and their families,” “cooperation among healthcare professionals,” “appropriate attitudes toward patients and their families,” “being with patients when they pass away,” “opinions of patients and their families,” “characteristics and threats of cancer,” and “mental health for healthcare workers.”The students were found to have acquired a more positive image of hospices.

Conclusion:

They reported gaining valuable experience from the direct encounters with patients and their family, and that they had acquired behavior appropriate for physicians, as well as knowledge and skills about the basic palliative care.</p>

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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: Palliative Care Research Year: 2017 Type: Article

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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: Palliative Care Research Year: 2017 Type: Article