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1.
HEC Forum ; 30(4): 329-339, 2018 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29752645

ABSTRACT

This is a case study of a program to address professionalism at the Universidad de la República in Uruguay. We describe a five-year ongoing international collaboration. Relevant characteristics of the context, the program components, activities, and results were analyzed. The expected outcomes were to introduce standards of professional practices in the curricula of medical students and residents and the implementation of a program that might lead to a significant change in the culture of medicine in the University. Traditional didactics, interactive theater, and professional development workshops, issues such as teamwork and communication, professional behavior, and the culture of medicine, and physician wellness were addressed. A total of 359 faculty members, general practitioners, stakeholders, and other healthcare professionals (nurses, psychologists, social workers) participated in the intervention. The process led to specific achievements including new content in the curricula, the use of educational innovations to address issues of professionalism, a growing institutional culture of accountability, and the establishment of new rules and regulations. The strategies and interventions followed in the case of Uruguay can serve as a model to other developing countries to promote physician professionalism, wellness, and joy.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/ethics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/standards , Professional Practice/standards , Attitude of Health Personnel , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Delivery of Health Care/trends , Empathy , Humans , Professional Practice/trends , Uruguay
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(45): 13805-10, 2015 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26504229

ABSTRACT

Testosterone is typically understood to contribute to maleness and masculinity, although it also responds to behaviors such as competition. Competition is crucial to evolution and may increase testosterone but also is selectively discouraged for women and encouraged for men via gender norms. We conducted an experiment to test how gender norms might modulate testosterone as mediated by two possible gender→testosterone pathways. Using a novel experimental design, participants (trained actors) performed a specific type of competition (wielding power) in stereotypically masculine vs. feminine ways. We hypothesized in H1 (stereotyped behavior) that wielding power increases testosterone regardless of how it is performed, vs. H2 (stereotyped performance), that wielding power performed in masculine but not feminine ways increases testosterone. We found that wielding power increased testosterone in women compared with a control, regardless of whether it was performed in gender-stereotyped masculine or feminine ways. Results supported H1 over H2: stereotyped behavior but not performance modulated testosterone. These results also supported theory that competition modulates testosterone over masculinity. Our findings thus support a gender→testosterone pathway mediated by competitive behavior. Accordingly, cultural pushes for men to wield power and women to avoid doing so may partially explain, in addition to heritable factors, why testosterone levels tend to be higher in men than in women: A lifetime of gender socialization could contribute to "sex differences" in testosterone. Our experiment opens up new questions of gender→testosterone pathways, highlighting the potential of examining nature/nurture interactions and effects of socialization on human biology.


Subject(s)
Competitive Behavior/physiology , Gender Identity , Sex Characteristics , Testosterone/analysis , Adult , Female , Humans , Immunoenzyme Techniques , Male , Michigan , Radioimmunoassay , Saliva/chemistry
4.
J Cancer Educ ; 29(4): 704-8, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24683056

ABSTRACT

Creative arts have been increasingly implemented in medical education. This study investigated the use of interactive theater and role play with professional actors in teaching breaking bad news to medical students. The objectives were to explore the contexts, approaches, experiences, and reactions in giving and receiving bad news. Second-year medical students participated in a required educational session that utilized interactive theater which helps students learn about the issues of breaking bad news to a patient with cancer. Following the interactive theater piece, professional actors provided students role play experiences in small groups with breaking bad news. Anonymous evaluation surveys were given out to all second-year medical students at the conclusion of the breaking bad news session. Surveys contained quantitative and qualitative responses. Three years of evaluations were analyzed. A total of 451 (88 %) students completed the evaluations. Comments were thematically analyzed. Ninety-four percent agreed that the theater piece prompted reflection on patient-provider communications, and 89 % agreed that it stimulated discussion on complex issues with breaking bad news. The two most common themes in student comments concerned the importance of realism in the theater piece, and the value of experiencing multiple perspectives. Use of professional actors during the role play exercises enhances the realism and pushed the students out of their own "comfort zones" in ways that may more closely approximate real life clinical situations. Interactive theater can be a potentially powerful tool to teach breaking bad news during medical school.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Communication , Drama , Role Playing , Students, Medical/psychology , Terminally Ill , Truth Disclosure , Humans , Patient Simulation , Physician-Patient Relations , Survivors
5.
Teach Learn Med ; 21(3): 195-200, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20183338

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Interactive theatre (IT) has been used to train faculty the skills and strategies to address challenging dynamics in educational settings. PURPOSE: This study described the development, implementation, and evaluation of an IT approach to improve preceptors' skills for increasing patients' acceptance of medical student participation in clinical care. METHODS: Focus groups were conducted with faculty, residents, medical students, and clinic staff to discuss issues related to patients declining medical student participation. Findings were used to develop a faculty development session using an IT approach. At a Family Medicine grand rounds presentation, faculty and resident preceptors (n = 42) participated in the IT workshop and completed a pre-post survey assessing skills specific to increasing students' training opportunities in patient care and educational impact of the session. RESULTS: Following the IT session, preceptors reported greater self-efficacy for helping patients feel more comfortable with medical students in the exam room (p =.031, d = 0.338) and increased comfort level with talking to patients about medical students performing sensitive exams (p =.010, d = 0.357). Eighty-eight percent of preceptors agreed or strongly agreed that the session was relevant to improving clinical precepting skills and helped them develop strategies for enhancing medical student involvement in care. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that the interactive theatre approach to faculty development is an innovative and effective method to increase preceptors' comfort with discussing medical student involvement with patients.


Subject(s)
Drama , Family Practice/education , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Patients/psychology , Physician-Patient Relations , Preceptorship , Students, Medical , Adult , Clinical Competence , Cross-Sectional Studies , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/standards , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Preceptorship/standards , Surveys and Questionnaires , Treatment Refusal
6.
Med Teach ; 29(4): 335-40, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17786747

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The development of critical consciousness, anchored in principles of social justice, is an essential component of medical education. AIM: In order to assist faculty instructors in facilitating small-group discussions on potentially contentious issues involving race, gender, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic class, a faculty development workshop was created. METHODS: The workshop used 'Forum Theater' techniques in which the audience was directly involved in determining the course of a simulated classroom discussion and conflict. We assessed the workshop's impact on the instructors' attitudes regarding facilitation of small-group discussions through two surveys: one to gauge immediate impressions, and another, 9-15 months later, to assess impact over time. RESULTS: Immediately after the workshop, participants reported that the topics covered in the sketch and in the discussion were highly relevant. In the follow-up survey, the instructors agreed that the workshop had raised their awareness of the classroom experiences of minorities and women and had offered strategies for addressing destructive classroom dynamics. 72% reported that the workshop led to changes in their behavior as facilitators. Differences in responses according to gender were observed. CONCLUSIONS: A workshop using interactive theater was effective in training faculty to facilitate small-group discussions about multicultural issues. This approach emphasizes and models the need to foster critical consciousness in medical education.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Drama , Education, Medical , Education , Faculty, Medical , Staff Development/methods , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Male , Program Evaluation , Sex Factors
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