Abstract
IntroductionIt is widely recognized that physicians of all backgrounds benefit from having a general palliative care skill set to optimally manage their patients at the end of life. However, strategies to teach palliative care skills to trainees outside palliative medicine vary widely. In this report, we provide an evidence-based and cross-disciplinary palliative care framework applicable to a spectrum of specialty training environments and intended for nonpalliative care trainees. InnovationWe developed and implemented a concise, multimodal, and evidence-based pilot palliative care curriculum focused on essential general palliative care skills required by physicians providing patient care along the continuum of life across specializations. A needs assessment (local research, literature review, and consensus expert opinion) in combination with learner characteristics (Kolb Learning Style Inventory, Palliative Medicine Comfort and Confidence Survey, and knowledge pretest) informed the development of a curricular outline. The first iteration of the curriculum was formulated and delivered. Extensive evaluation, reassessment, and feedback led to a second iteration, which is presented here. OutcomesAlthough the context will differ according to specialization, there are essential palliative care skills required of most specialist physicians. General palliative themes identified for focus include symptom management, communication, psychosocial aspects of care, care coordination and access, and myths and pitfalls in palliative care. CommentSpecialty trainees' value embedded training in essential themes in palliative care within the context of their training program. The process and results of this project, including the provision of a framework, may be applied to postgraduate training programs in various specialties.
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