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Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs

INTRODUCTION: Efforts to improve pain education and knowledge about prescription opioid misuse and opioid/substance use disorder in undergraduate medical education continue to be inadequate. To advance educational practices and address training needs to counter the opioid epidemic, we created a long...

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Autores principales: Lu, Wei-Hsin, Baldelli, Perrilynn, Migdal, Phyllis, Iuli, Richard, Strano-Paul, Lisa, Zacharoff, Kevin L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Association of American Medical Colleges 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8986891/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35497675
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11234
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author Lu, Wei-Hsin
Baldelli, Perrilynn
Migdal, Phyllis
Iuli, Richard
Strano-Paul, Lisa
Zacharoff, Kevin L.
author_facet Lu, Wei-Hsin
Baldelli, Perrilynn
Migdal, Phyllis
Iuli, Richard
Strano-Paul, Lisa
Zacharoff, Kevin L.
author_sort Lu, Wei-Hsin
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Efforts to improve pain education and knowledge about prescription opioid misuse and opioid/substance use disorder in undergraduate medical education continue to be inadequate. To advance educational practices and address training needs to counter the opioid epidemic, we created a longitudinal pain and addiction curriculum that includes three patient vignettes in which the patient requests an early refill of opioid medication. The goal was to introduce students to the potential impact of personal biases on health care delivery and medical decision-making with patients who have pain and/or substance use disorders. METHODS: Three clinical vignettes were presented to early matriculating medical students (MS 1s) using a progressive case disclosure approach in the format of a PowerPoint presentation with embedded audio interactions and follow-up audience response system questions. The same vignettes were converted into OSCEs for early clinical clerkship students (MS 3s). RESULTS: A total of 180 MS 1s participated in the case presentations, and 124 MS 3s participated in the OSCE session. There was a significant difference between students' level of comfort and individual patient requests for early prescription refills in both student cohorts. MS 1s were significantly more likely to provide the early refill to the elderly female patient compared to the two middle-age male patients, whereas a majority of MS 3s wanted more information. DISCUSSION: This module can be presented to medical students who have little clinical exposure and to health care trainees at other levels of clinical exposure.
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spelling pubmed-89868912022-04-27 Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs Lu, Wei-Hsin Baldelli, Perrilynn Migdal, Phyllis Iuli, Richard Strano-Paul, Lisa Zacharoff, Kevin L. MedEdPORTAL Original Publication INTRODUCTION: Efforts to improve pain education and knowledge about prescription opioid misuse and opioid/substance use disorder in undergraduate medical education continue to be inadequate. To advance educational practices and address training needs to counter the opioid epidemic, we created a longitudinal pain and addiction curriculum that includes three patient vignettes in which the patient requests an early refill of opioid medication. The goal was to introduce students to the potential impact of personal biases on health care delivery and medical decision-making with patients who have pain and/or substance use disorders. METHODS: Three clinical vignettes were presented to early matriculating medical students (MS 1s) using a progressive case disclosure approach in the format of a PowerPoint presentation with embedded audio interactions and follow-up audience response system questions. The same vignettes were converted into OSCEs for early clinical clerkship students (MS 3s). RESULTS: A total of 180 MS 1s participated in the case presentations, and 124 MS 3s participated in the OSCE session. There was a significant difference between students' level of comfort and individual patient requests for early prescription refills in both student cohorts. MS 1s were significantly more likely to provide the early refill to the elderly female patient compared to the two middle-age male patients, whereas a majority of MS 3s wanted more information. DISCUSSION: This module can be presented to medical students who have little clinical exposure and to health care trainees at other levels of clinical exposure. Association of American Medical Colleges 2022-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8986891/ /pubmed/35497675 http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11234 Text en © 2022 Lu et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) license.
spellingShingle Original Publication
Lu, Wei-Hsin
Baldelli, Perrilynn
Migdal, Phyllis
Iuli, Richard
Strano-Paul, Lisa
Zacharoff, Kevin L.
Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs
title Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs
title_full Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs
title_fullStr Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs
title_full_unstemmed Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs
title_short Early Refill of an Opioid Medication: Recognizing Personal Biases Through Clinical Vignettes and OSCEs
title_sort early refill of an opioid medication: recognizing personal biases through clinical vignettes and osces
topic Original Publication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8986891/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35497675
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11234
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