Epistemology and Uncertainty: A Follow-up Study With Third-year Medical Students

被引:0
作者
Evans, Lance [1 ]
Trotter, David R. M. [2 ]
Jones, Betsy Goebel
Ragain, R. Michael
Cook, Ronald L.
Prabhu, Fiona R.
Linton, Kitten S.
机构
[1] Texas Tech Univ, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Family & Community Med, Lubbock, TX 79430 USA
[2] Texas Tech Univ, Dept Psychol, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA
关键词
PATIENT COMMUNICATION; PHYSICIANS REACTIONS; BELIEFS; CARE; ATTITUDES; EDUCATION; OUTCOMES; PREDICT; SCALE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Prior research results indicate a relationship between medical epistemology (ie, how a physician organizes and prioritizes the biological and psychosocial data of a patient presentation) and stress reactions to uncertainty among primary care physicians. However, little is known about when this relationship forms. The purpose of this study was to begin answering this question by exploring the relationship between medical epistemology and stress reactions to uncertainty among a group of 89 third-year medical students from the class of 2010 of a three-campus state medical school located in the southwestern US. METHODS: Data from Likert-type measures of medical epistemology and stress reactions to uncertainty were extracted from course evaluation information that was collected at the start (T1) and end (T2) of a continuity clinic experience that spanned most of the students' third year. Using these data, the authors conducted a simple bivariate regression analysis to identify the relationship between medical epistemology and stress reactions to uncertainty (Model 1), and a multivariate regression analysis to test for the independent effect of medical epistemology on stress reactions to uncertainty while controlling for gender and specialty interest (Model 2). These two regression models were calculated for both the T1 and T2 data sets. RESULTS: The two regression models at T1 indicated no significant relationships between medical epistemology and stress reactions to uncertainty; however, the two regression models at T2 indicated that a biopsychosocial epistemology is associated with less stress reactions to uncertainty, and a biomedical epistemology is associated with more stress reactions to uncertainty. CONCLUSIONS: The third year is an opportune time for medical educators to help shape and develop students' medical epistemology and stress reactions to uncertainty.
引用
收藏
页码:14 / 21
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] IMPLEMENTING A THIRD-YEAR EMERGENCY MEDICINE MEDICAL STUDENT CURRICULUM
    Tews, Matthew C.
    Wyte, Collette Marie Ditz
    Coltman, Marion
    Hiller, Kathy
    Jung, Julianna
    Oyama, Leslie C.
    Jubanyik, Karen
    Khandelwal, Sorabh
    Goldenberg, William
    Wald, David A.
    Zun, Leslie S.
    Zinzuwadia, Shreni
    Pandit, Kiran
    An, Charlene
    Ander, Douglas S.
    JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2015, 48 (06) : 732 - +
  • [42] Influence of Third-Year Clerkships on Medical Student Specialty Preferences
    Kathleen E. Ellsbury
    Jan D. Carline
    David M. Irby
    Frank T. Stritter
    Advances in Health Sciences Education, 1998, 3 : 177 - 186
  • [43] Medical Student Perspectives on Professionalism in a Third-Year Surgery Clerkship - A Mixed Methods Study
    DiBrito, Sandra
    Mago, Jacob
    Reczek, Annika
    Suresh, Dharshini
    Kim, Daniel
    Jacoby, Liva
    Shelton, Wayne
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 2024, 81 (11) : 1720 - 1729
  • [44] Influence of Third-Year Clerkships on Medical Student Specialty Preferences
    Ellsbury, Kathleen E.
    Carline, Jan D.
    Irby, David M.
    Stritter, Frank T.
    ADVANCES IN HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION, 1998, 3 (03) : 177 - 186
  • [45] A longitudinal study of third-year medical students' communication competence, communication anxiety, and attitudes toward patient-centered care
    Kerr, Anna M.
    Thompson, Charee M.
    PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING, 2022, 105 (05) : 1298 - 1304
  • [46] Third-year nursing students' lived experience of caring for the dying: a hermeneutic phenomenological approach
    Ranse, Kristen
    Ranse, Jamie
    Pelkowitz, Mikayla
    CONTEMPORARY NURSE, 2018, 54 (02) : 160 - 170
  • [47] Tobacco use and smoking cessation among third-year dental students in southern Brazil
    Musskopf, Marta L.
    Fiorini, Tiago
    Haddad, Daniel C.
    Susin, Cristiano
    INTERNATIONAL DENTAL JOURNAL, 2014, 64 (06) : 312 - 317
  • [48] Comparison of a Modified Longitudinal Simulation-Based Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support to a Traditional Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support Curriculum in Third-Year Medical Students
    Ko, Paul Y.
    Scott, Jay M.
    Mihai, Aurel
    Grant, William D.
    TEACHING AND LEARNING IN MEDICINE, 2011, 23 (04) : 324 - 330
  • [49] Qualitative Analysis of Medical Student Impressions of a Narrative Exercise in the Third-Year Psychiatry Clerkship
    Garrison, David
    Lyness, Jeffrey M.
    Frank, Julia B.
    Epstein, Ronald M.
    ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2011, 86 (01) : 85 - 89
  • [50] An Oncology Pharmacy Practice Elective Course for Third-Year Pharmacy Students
    Nystrom, Kelly K.
    Pick, Amy M.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL EDUCATION, 2013, 77 (01)