Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents

Abstract Background Social context guides care; stories sustain meaning; neither is routinely prioritized in residency training. Healing Through History (HTH) is a social medicine consultation curriculum integrating social determinants of health narrative into clinical care for medically and sociall...

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Main Authors: Joel Bradley, David Styren, Abigail LaPlante, John Howe, Sienna R. Craig, Emily Cohen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02505-1
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spelling doaj-7315a8fd68eb411d8c8dbab06e8da55c2021-02-14T12:09:04ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202021-02-012111910.1186/s12909-021-02505-1Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residentsJoel Bradley0David Styren1Abigail LaPlante2John Howe3Sienna R. Craig4Emily Cohen5White River Junction VA Medical Center (10E2E)Dartmouth Hitchcock Internal Medicine Residency ProgramTufts University School of MedicineDartmouth Hitchcock Internal Medicine Residency ProgramDartmouth College Department of AnthropologyWhite River Junction VA Medical Center (10E2E)Abstract Background Social context guides care; stories sustain meaning; neither is routinely prioritized in residency training. Healing Through History (HTH) is a social medicine consultation curriculum integrating social determinants of health narrative into clinical care for medically and socially complex patients. The curriculum is part of an internal medicine (IM) residency outpatient clinical rotation at a Veterans Health Administration hospital. Our aim was to explore how in-depth social medicine consultations may impact resident clinical practice and foster meaning in work. Methods From 2017 to 2019, 49 categorical and preliminary residents in their first year of IM training were given two half-day sessions to identify and interview a patient; develop a co-produced social medicine narrative; review it with patient and faculty; and share it in the electronic health record (EHR). Medical anthropologists conducted separate 90-min focus groups of first- and second-year IM residents in 2019, 1–15 months from the experience. Results 46 (94%) completed HTH consultations, of which 40 (87%) were approved by patients and published in the EHR. 12 (46%) categorical IM residents participated in focus groups; 6 PGY1, and 6 PGY2. Qualitative analysis yielded 3 themes: patient connection, insight, and clinical impact; clinical skill development; and structural barriers to the practice of social medicine. Conclusions HTH offers a model for teaching co-production through social and narrative medicine consultation in complex clinical care, while fostering meaning in work. Integration throughout training may further enhance impact.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02505-1Social medicineSocial determinants of healthNarrative medicineMeaning in medicineCo-production
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joel Bradley
David Styren
Abigail LaPlante
John Howe
Sienna R. Craig
Emily Cohen
spellingShingle Joel Bradley
David Styren
Abigail LaPlante
John Howe
Sienna R. Craig
Emily Cohen
Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
BMC Medical Education
Social medicine
Social determinants of health
Narrative medicine
Meaning in medicine
Co-production
author_facet Joel Bradley
David Styren
Abigail LaPlante
John Howe
Sienna R. Craig
Emily Cohen
author_sort Joel Bradley
title Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
title_short Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
title_full Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
title_fullStr Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
title_full_unstemmed Healing Through History: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
title_sort healing through history: a qualitative evaluation of a social medicine consultation curriculum for internal medicine residents
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Social context guides care; stories sustain meaning; neither is routinely prioritized in residency training. Healing Through History (HTH) is a social medicine consultation curriculum integrating social determinants of health narrative into clinical care for medically and socially complex patients. The curriculum is part of an internal medicine (IM) residency outpatient clinical rotation at a Veterans Health Administration hospital. Our aim was to explore how in-depth social medicine consultations may impact resident clinical practice and foster meaning in work. Methods From 2017 to 2019, 49 categorical and preliminary residents in their first year of IM training were given two half-day sessions to identify and interview a patient; develop a co-produced social medicine narrative; review it with patient and faculty; and share it in the electronic health record (EHR). Medical anthropologists conducted separate 90-min focus groups of first- and second-year IM residents in 2019, 1–15 months from the experience. Results 46 (94%) completed HTH consultations, of which 40 (87%) were approved by patients and published in the EHR. 12 (46%) categorical IM residents participated in focus groups; 6 PGY1, and 6 PGY2. Qualitative analysis yielded 3 themes: patient connection, insight, and clinical impact; clinical skill development; and structural barriers to the practice of social medicine. Conclusions HTH offers a model for teaching co-production through social and narrative medicine consultation in complex clinical care, while fostering meaning in work. Integration throughout training may further enhance impact.
topic Social medicine
Social determinants of health
Narrative medicine
Meaning in medicine
Co-production
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02505-1
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