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“I Don’t Trust It”: Use of a Routine OSCE to Identify Core Communication Skills Required for Counseling a Vaccine-Hesitant Patient

BACKGROUND: Vaccine hesitancy is challenging for clinicians and of increasing concern since COVID-19 vaccination rollout began. Standardized patients (SPs) provide an ideal method for assessing resident physicians’ current skills, providing opportunity to practice and gain immediate feedback, while...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wilhite, Jeffrey A., Zabar, Sondra, Gillespie, Colleen, Hauck, Kevin, Horlick, Margaret, Greene, Richard E., Hanley, Kathleen, Adams, Jennifer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9202969/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35710665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07495-4
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Vaccine hesitancy is challenging for clinicians and of increasing concern since COVID-19 vaccination rollout began. Standardized patients (SPs) provide an ideal method for assessing resident physicians’ current skills, providing opportunity to practice and gain immediate feedback, while also informing evaluation of curriculum and training. As such, we designed and implemented an OSCE station where residents were tasked with engaging and educating a vaccine-hesitant patient. AIM: Describe residents’ vaccine counseling practices, core communication and interpersonal skills, and effectiveness in meeting the objectives of the case. Explore how effectiveness in overcoming vaccine hesitancy may be associated with communication and interpersonal skills in order to inform educational efforts. SETTING: Annual OSCE at a simulation center. PARTICIPANTS: 106 internal medicine residents (51% PGY1, 49% PGY2). PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: Residents participated in an annual residency-wide, multi-station OSCE, one of which included a Black, middle-aged, vaccine-hesitant male presenting for a routine video visit. Residents had 10 min to complete the encounter, during which they sought to educate, explore concerns, and make a recommendation. After each encounter, faculty gave residents feedback on their counseling skills and reviewed best practices for effective communication on the topic. SPs completed a behaviorally anchored checklist (30 items across 7 clinical skill domains and 2 measures of trust in the vaccine’s safety and resident) which will inform future curriculum. PROGRAM EVALUATION: Fifty-five percent (SD: 43%) of the residents performed well on the vaccine-specific education domain. PGY2 residents scored significantly higher on two of the seven domains compared to PGY1s (patient education/counseling—PGY1: 35% (SD: 36%) vs. PGY2: 52% (SD: 41%), p = 0.044 and activation—PGY1: 37% (SD: 45%) vs. PGY2: 59% (SD: 46%), p = 0.016). In regression analyses, education/counseling and vaccine-specific communication skills were strongly, positively associated with trust in the resident and in the vaccine’s safety. A review of qualitative data from the SPs’ perspective suggested that low performers did not use patient-centered communication skills. DISCUSSION: This needs assessment suggests that many residents needed in-the-moment feedback, additional education, and vaccine-specific communication practice. Our program plans to reinforce evidence-based practices physicians can implement for vaccine hesitancy through ongoing curriculum, practice, and feedback. This type of needs assessment is replicable at other institutions and can be used, as we have, to ultimately shed light on next steps for programmatic improvement. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11606-022-07495-4.