Reflective Writing for Medical Students on the Surgical Clerkship: Oxymoron or Antidote?

Male Academic Medical Centers Students, Medical Writing 4. Education Clinical Clerkship 02 engineering and technology 16. Peace & justice 3. Good health 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine General Surgery 0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering Humans Female Empathy Education, Medical, Undergraduate
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2015.11.002 Publication Date: 2016-01-12T10:49:01Z
ABSTRACT
Reflective writing has emerged as a solution to declining empathy during clinical training. However, the role for reflective writing has not been studied in a surgical setting. The aim of this proof-of-concept study was to assess receptivity to a reflective-writing intervention among third-year medical students on their surgical clerkship.The reflective-writing intervention was a 1-hour, peer-facilitated writing workshop. This study employed a pre-post-intervention design. Subjects were surveyed on their experience 4 weeks before participation in the intervention and immediately afterwards. Surveys assessed student receptivity to reflective writing as well as self-perceived empathy, writing habits, and communication behaviors using a Likert-response scale. Quantitative responses were analyzed using paired t tests and linear regression. Qualitative responses were analyzed using an iterative consensus model.Yale-New Haven hospital, a tertiary care academic center.All medical students of Yale School of Medicine, rotating on their surgical clerkship during a 9-month period (74 in total) were eligible. In all, 25 students completed this study.The proportion of students desiring more opportunities for reflective writing increased from 32%-64%. The proportion of students receptive to a mandatory writing workshop increased from 16%-40%. These differences were both significant (p = 0.003 and p = 0.001). In all, 88% of students also reported new insight as a result of the workshop. In total, 39% of students reported a more positive impression of the surgical profession after participation.Overall, the workshop was well-received by students and improved student attitudes toward reflective writing and the surgical profession. Larger studies are required to validate the effect of this workshop on objective empathy measures. This study demonstrates how reflective writing can be incorporated into a presurgical curriculum.
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