Practicing Serious Illness Conversations in a Pulmonary Medicine Teaching Clinic. - 2024

BACKGROUND: Physician trainees in pulmonary medicine are not provided with supervised practice opportunities to gain confidence and skill in having serious illness conversations in the ambulatory setting. CONCLUSIONS: Pulmonary medicine trainees were provided practice opportunities for having serious illness conversations under the supervision of the palliative medicine attending. These practice opportunities effected trainee perception on important barriers to further practice. METHODS: Trainees in a pulmonary medicine teaching clinic requested supervision from a palliative medicine attending based on a set of evidence-based pulmonary-specific triggers that indicate advanced disease. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to determine the trainee's perceptions of the educational intervention. OBJECTIVE: We incorporated a palliative medicine attending into an ambulatory pulmonology teaching clinic to provide supervised opportunities for serious illness conversations. RESULTS: The palliative medicine attending supervised 8 trainees in 58 patient encounters. The most common trigger for palliative medicine supervision was answering "no" to the "surprise question." At baseline, all trainees cited lack of time as the primary barrier to having serious illness conversations. Themes emerging from post-intervention semi-structured interviews included trainees learning that (1) patients are grateful to have conversations about the severity of their illness, (2) patients do not have a good sense of their prognosis, and (3) with improved skills, these conversations can be conducted efficiently.


English

1049-9091

10.1177/10499091231158763 [doi]


*Physicians
*Pulmonary Medicine
Communication
Humans


MedStar Washington Hospital Center


Medicine/Palliative Care
Medicine/Pulmonary-Critical Care


Journal Article