Undergraduate students' attitudes to communication skills learning differ depending on year of study and gender

The authors wished to assess medical students' attitudes towards communication skills learning, and to validate the use of the Communication Skills Attitude Scale (CSAS) in a different population. This cross-sectional study of Years 1–3 MBChB students, University of Aberdeen, in 2002–03 (overall response rate = 86.2%) identified significant differences in attitudes to communication skills teaching by year of study and gender. PAS (positive attitudes scores) for Year 1 were significantly higher than those for Years 2 and 3. NAS (negative attitudes scores) for Year 1 were significantly lower than the scores for Year 2 but not Year 3. The scores for Years 2 and 3 were not significantly different. Female students had a significantly higher mean PAS score and lower mean NAS score than males, and were more likely to disagree that their communication and clinical skills were competent. While cohort effects may be present, it seems that attitudes towards communication skills learning are positive initially, becoming less so until students experience interacting with patients. Differences between male and female students reflect those seen in previous studies. The findings presented support the use of the CSAS as an appropriate tool to measure attitudes in a wide population of medical students.

[1]  J. Cleland,et al.  Epidemiology teaching: student and tutor perceptions , 2004, Medical teacher.

[2]  A. Jones,et al.  Can undergraduate education have an effect on the ways in which pre‐registration house officers conceptualise communication? , 2003, Medical education.

[3]  C. Rees,et al.  Evaluating first-year medical students' attitudes to learning communication skills before and after a communication skills course , 2003, Medical teacher.

[4]  C. Rees,et al.  The relationship between medical students' attitudes towards communication skills learning and their demographic and education‐related characteristics , 2002, Medical education.

[5]  P. Maguire,et al.  Key communication skills and how to acquire them , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[6]  Charlotte Rees,et al.  The development of a scale to measure medical students' attitudes towards communication skills learning: the Communication Skills Attitude Scale (CSAS) , 2002, Medical education.

[7]  C. Rees,et al.  A qualitative study to explore undergraduate medical students' attitudes towards communication skills learning , 2002, Medical teacher.

[8]  P. Hajek,et al.  Medical students’ concerns about communicating with patients , 2000, Medical education.

[9]  Holm,et al.  Pedagogical methods and affect tolerance in medical students , 1999, Medical education.

[10]  Christine Hughes Mcsp BPhil Teaching and Learning Communication Skills in Medicine , 1999 .

[11]  K. Aspegren BEME Guide No. 2: Teaching and learning communication skills in medicine-a review with quality grading of articles. , 1999, Medical teacher.

[12]  S. Meryn Improving doctor-patient communication , 1998, BMJ.

[13]  Rosenthal,et al.  Changes in Medical education: the beliefs of medical students , 1998, Medical education.

[14]  R. Sanson-Fisher,et al.  Effective teaching of communication skills for medical practice: selecting an appropriate clinical context , 1997, Medical education.

[15]  J. Benbassat Teaching the social sciences to undergraduate medical students. , 1996, Israel journal of medical sciences.

[16]  P. Kinderman,et al.  Clinical communication skills teaching: the role of cognitive schemata , 1995, Medical education.

[17]  Wendy Levinson,et al.  Physician Frustration in Communicating with Patients , 1993, Medical care.

[18]  L. Walker,et al.  A medical curriculum: evaluation by final‐year students , 1981, Medical education.