Abstract

Background: Delivering difficult news to individuals diagnosed with mental health disorders and their family members can be challenging. The use of simulated patients (SP) is an effective teaching method to enhance clinical skills, particularly those around communication. We developed, implemented, and evaluated the effectiveness of an SP-based training module to improve psychiatric residents' clinical communication skills in delivering difficult news.Methods: We conducted 5-h workshops consisting of 3 components: (1) a high-fidelity simulation session with a professional actor; (2) a 30-min lecture; and (3) role-playing of 3 short scenarios, during which residents rotated taking on different roles (as psychiatrist, patient, or family member). We observed through a 1-way mirror and videotaped each resident's simulation session and followed it with personalized debriefing. Following the workshop, each resident received the full-length video of their simulated interview, together with a list of questions as a take-home assignment. Two months after the workshop, the residents were invited to a second SP-based session, during which 2 independent evaluators, each a board-certified psychiatrist with expertise in medical simulation, evaluated the participants' communication skills using a previously validated instrument. To avoid observation bias, the 2 evaluators rated the videotapes blind to the timing of the simulation (pre- vs. post-training). Participants completed self-report questionnaires on satisfaction and self-confidence, before, after, and 2 months following the workshop.Findings: Of the 28 psychiatric residents who participated in the training day, 24 (86%) completed the post-workshop evaluation. Mean communication score increased from 24.9 to 27.8 (paired t-test: 5.6, p < 0.001). The mean score for the self-confidence questionnaire, calculated on a 1 to 5 Likert scale, increased from 3.4 to 4.0 after the training day, and remained unchanged (4.2) 2 months later (p < 0.001).Conclusions: An SP-based training module proved useful in improving the objectively measured communication skills of psychiatric residents delivering difficult news. The training further enhanced participants' subjective sense of confidence in those clinical skills.

Highlights

  • In psychiatry, sharing diagnoses and other difficult information can be challenging [1]

  • We developed, implemented, and evaluated the effectiveness of an simulated patients (SP)-based training module to improve psychiatric residents’ clinical communication skills in delivering difficult news

  • We conducted 5-h workshops consisting of 3 components: [1] a high-fidelity simulation session with a professional actor; [2] a 30-min lecture; and [3] role-playing of 3 short scenarios, during which residents rotated taking on different roles

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Summary

Introduction

In psychiatry, sharing diagnoses and other difficult information can be challenging [1]. Mental health providers reported fears about delivering an incorrect diagnosis, the patient’s distress, and the stigmatizing impact of using words such as “schizophrenia” [4, 6, 7]. Patients and their relatives have expressed dissatisfaction with the way diagnostic and other sensitive information was shared with them [8], and several studies have demonstrated that individuals diagnosed with mental health disorders and their relatives want to be fully informed–and should [9, 10]. We developed, implemented, and evaluated the effectiveness of an SP-based training module to improve psychiatric residents’ clinical communication skills in delivering difficult news

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