Premium
Medical students’ experiences with goals of care discussions and their impact on professional identity formation
Author(s) -
Wang Xuyi Mimi,
Swinton Marilyn,
You John J
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1111/medu.14006
Subject(s) - curriculum , medical education , psychology , psychological intervention , distress , nonprobability sampling , interpretative phenomenological analysis , qualitative research , context (archaeology) , identity (music) , medicine , pedagogy , psychotherapist , sociology , psychiatry , population , social science , paleontology , environmental health , biology , physics , acoustics
Context Goals of care (GoC) discussions occur amongst patients, family members and clinicians in order to establish plans of care and are invaluable aspects of end‐of‐life care. In previous research, medical learners have reported insufficient training and emotional distress about end‐of‐life decision making, but most studies have focused on postgraduate trainees and have been quantitative or have evaluated specific educational interventions. None have qualitatively explored medical students’ experiences with GoC discussions, their perceptions of associated hidden curricula, and the impacts of these on professional identity formation ( PIF ), the individualised developmental processes by which laypersons evolve to think, act and feel like, and ultimately become, medical professionals. Methods Using purposive sampling at one Canadian medical school, individual semi‐structured interviews were conducted with 18 medical students to explore their experiences with GoC discussions during their core internal medicine clerkship. Interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed and anonymised. Concurrently with data collection, transcripts were analysed iteratively and inductively using interpretative phenomenological analysis, a qualitative research approach that allows the rich exploration of subjective experiences. Results Participants reported minimal support and supervision in conducting GoC discussions, which were experienced as ethically challenging, emotionally powerful encounters exemplifying tensions between formal and hidden curricula. Role modelling and institutional culture were key mechanisms through which hidden curricula were transmitted, subverting formal curricula in doing so and contributing to participants’ emotional distress. Participants’ coping responses were generally negative and included symptoms of burnout, the pursuit of standardisation, rationalisation, compartmentalisation and the adaptation of previously held, more idealised professional identities. Conclusions GoC discussions in this study were often led by inexperienced medical students and impacted negatively on their PIF . Through complex emotional processes, they struggled to reconcile earlier concepts of physician identities with newly developing ones and often reluctantly adopted suboptimal professional behaviours and attitudes. Improved education about GoC discussions is necessary for patient care and may represent concrete and specific opportunities to influence students’ PIF positively.