The rise and fall of students' skill in obtaining a medical history

A gradual shift towards a more humanistic conception of medicine has occurred in recent years. Along with this shift have come attempts by medical educators to include interviewing and communication skills as part of the medical curriculum. The current study evaluates the effectiveness of a clinical medicine curriculum which emphasizes interviewing skills. Between 1992 and 1994 the 292 graduates of the University of Connecticut School of Medicine participated in five clinical skills teaching and assessment programmes during the four years of medical school. During each of these five programmes, the students' interviewing skills were rated using the Arizona Clinical Interview Rating Scale (ACIR). The raters were standardized patients with whom they had just completed a medical encounter. Results show that students' development of skills differed, with closure items showing the greatest increase and social history items showing the greatest decline, with an overall initial increase and then a decline in interviewing skills over the four years. Explanations for these findings include the de‐emphasis of communication skills during the clinical years and the culture of medicine to which students are exposed during these years.

[1]  L. Gruppen,et al.  Medical students' self-assessment accuracy in communication skills. , 1997, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[2]  R. Williams,et al.  The effect of medical education on students' patient‐satisfaction ratings , 1997, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[3]  Housestaff Social History Knowledge , 1996, Evaluation & the health professions.

[4]  C. Griffith,et al.  Housestaff's knowledge of their patients' social histories , 1995, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[5]  C. Sc The doctor-patient relationship and medical malpractice litigation. , 1993 .

[6]  S. Charles The doctor-patient relationship and medical malpractice litigation. , 1993, Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic.

[7]  D. Steele,et al.  Have you been taking your pills? The adherence-monitoring sequence in the medical interview. , 1990, The Journal of family practice.

[8]  E. Annandale The malpractice crisis and the doctor-patient relationship. , 1989, Sociology of health & illness.

[9]  T. Mizrahi,et al.  Getting rid of patients : contradictions in the socialization of physicians , 1987 .

[10]  D. Tuckett,et al.  A new approach to the measurement of patients' understanding of what they are told in medical consultations. , 1985, Journal of health and social behavior.

[11]  P. Sommers Malpractice risk and patient relations. , 1984, The Journal of family practice.

[12]  E. Speedling,et al.  Building an effective doctor-patient relationship: from patient satisfaction to patient participation. , 1985, Social science & medicine.

[13]  D. Stabenow Avoiding patient complaints? Communicate! Communicate! , 1985, Iowa medicine : journal of the Iowa Medical Society.

[14]  R. Wasserman,et al.  Pediatric clinicians' support for parents makes a difference: an outcome-based analysis of clinician-parent interaction. , 1984, Pediatrics.

[15]  J. Treadway,et al.  Patient satisfaction and the content of general practice consultations. , 1983, The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[16]  W. Kukull,et al.  Outcome-Based Doctor-Patient Interaction Analysis: I. Comparison of Techniques , 1982, Medical care.

[17]  J S Goodwin,et al.  Physician behaviors that correlate with patient satisfaction. , 1982, Journal of medical education.

[18]  G. Glass,et al.  The effect of psychological intervention on recovery from surgery and heart attacks: an analysis of the literature. , 1982, American journal of public health.

[19]  M. Dimatteo,et al.  Predicting Patient Satisfaction from Physicians’ Nonverbal Communication Skills , 1980, Medical care.

[20]  R. Sanson-Fisher,et al.  Understanding the patient: a neglected aspect of medical eduction. , 1979, Social science & medicine. Medical psychology & medical sociology.

[21]  Sanson-Fisher Rw,et al.  Training medical students to empathize: an experimental study. , 1978 .

[22]  R. Sanson-Fisher,et al.  TRAINING MEDICAL STUDENTS TO EMPATHIZE AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY , 1978, The Medical journal of Australia.

[23]  P. Stillman,et al.  Construct Validation of the Arizona Clinical Interview Rating Scale , 1977 .

[24]  Whelan Rf The role of the university in medical education. , 1973 .

[25]  R. E. Helfer,et al.  Observations of pediatric interviewing skills. A longitudinal and cross-sectional study. , 1972, American journal of diseases of children.

[26]  Freeman Jw,et al.  Management of patients unconscious from drug overdosage. , 1970 .

[27]  A three year longitudinal study of the medical interview and its relationship to student performance in clinical medicine. , 1970, Journal of medical education.

[28]  R. E. Helfer An objective comparison of the pediatric interviewing skills of freshman and senior medical students. , 1970, Pediatrics.

[29]  A. A. Congalton PUBLIC EVALUATION OF MEDICAL CARE , 1969, The Medical journal of Australia.

[30]  W. Wingert,et al.  Pediatric emergency room patient. A comparison of patients seen during the day and at night. , 1968, American journal of diseases of children.

[31]  E. Charney,et al.  How well do patients take oral penicillin? A collaborative study in private practice. , 1967, Pediatrics.