Recommendations for a new curriculum in pain medicine for medical students: toward a career distinguished by competence and compassion.

Beth B Murinson, Vitaly Gordin, Susie Flynn, Larry C Driver, Rollin M Gallagher, Martin Grabois, Medical Student Education Sub-committee of the American Academy of Pain Medicine
Author Information
  1. Beth B Murinson: Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA. bb@jhmi.edu

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The education of physicians is a fundamental obligation within medicine that must remain closely aligned with clinical care. And although medical education in pain care is essential, the current state of medical education does not meet the needs of physicians, patients, or society. To address this, we convened a committee of pain specialist medical student educators.
METHODS: Tasked with creating systematically developed and valid recommendations for clinical education, we conducted a survey of pain medicine leadership within the American Academy of Pain Medicine (AAPM). The survey was conducted in two waves. We asked AAPM board members to rate 194 previously published pain medicine learning objectives for medical students; 79% of those eligible for participation responded.
RESULTS: The "Top 5" list included the awareness of acute and chronic pain, skillfulness in clinical appraisal, promotion of compassionate practices, displaying empathy toward the patient, and knowledge of terms and definitions for substance abuse. The "Top 10" list included the major pharmacological classes as well as skills in examination, communication, prescribing, and interviewing. The "Top 20" list included the pain care of cognitively impaired populations, those with comorbid illness, and older adults. With the survey results in consideration, the committee produced a new recommended topic list for curricula in pain medicine. We strongly recommend that adequate resources are devoted to fully integrated medical curricula in pain so that students will learn not only the necessary clinical knowledge but also be prepared to address the professional, personal, and ethical challenges that arise in caring for those with pain.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that improved medical education in pain is essential to prepare providers who manifest both competence and compassion toward their patients.

References

  1. Pain. 1988 Apr;33(1):1-2 [PMID: 3380546]
  2. Acad Med. 2002 Apr;77(4):323-8 [PMID: 11953298]
  3. J Gen Intern Med. 2000 Jul;15(7):503-8 [PMID: 10940138]
  4. J Pain. 2011 Dec;12(12):1199-208 [PMID: 21945594]
  5. Acad Med. 2012 Sep;87(9):1243-9 [PMID: 22836852]
  6. N Engl J Med. 2012 Jan 19;366(3):197-9 [PMID: 22256802]
  7. J Pain. 2008 Nov;9(11):975-83 [PMID: 18984501]
  8. Pain Res Manag. 2009 Nov-Dec;14(6):439-44 [PMID: 20011714]
  9. Sci Am. 2012 Oct;307(4):76-9 [PMID: 23029895]
  10. JAMA. 2002 Jan 9;287(2):226-35 [PMID: 11779266]
  11. Ann Indian Acad Neurol. 2012 Aug;15(Suppl 1):S89-94 [PMID: 23024571]
  12. JAMA. 2011 Apr 6;305(13):1346-7 [PMID: 21467287]
  13. Pain Med. 2011 Feb;12(2):183-5 [PMID: 21310002]
  14. Child Abuse Negl. 2006 Oct;30(10):1071-80 [PMID: 17014908]
  15. Pain Res Manag. 2011 Nov-Dec;16(6):421-6 [PMID: 22184551]
  16. JAMA. 2009 Mar 18;301(11):1155-64, E1 [PMID: 19293416]

Grants

  1. K08 NS048146/NINDS NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Clinical Competence
Curriculum
Education, Medical, Undergraduate
Empathy
Humans
Pain Management

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0painmedicaleducationmedicineclinicallistcaresurvey"TopincludedtowardphysicianswithinessentialpatientsaddresscommitteeconductedAAPMstudentsknowledgenewcurriculacompetencecompassionOBJECTIVE:fundamentalobligationmustremaincloselyalignedalthoughcurrentstatemeetneedssocietyconvenedspecialiststudenteducatorsMETHODS:TaskedcreatingsystematicallydevelopedvalidrecommendationsleadershipAmericanAcademyPainMedicinetwowavesaskedboardmembersrate194previouslypublishedlearningobjectives79%eligibleparticipationrespondedRESULTS:5"awarenessacutechronicskillfulnessappraisalpromotioncompassionatepracticesdisplayingempathypatienttermsdefinitionssubstanceabuse10"majorpharmacologicalclasseswellskillsexaminationcommunicationprescribinginterviewing20"cognitivelyimpairedpopulationscomorbidillnessolderadultsresultsconsiderationproducedrecommendedtopicstronglyrecommendadequateresourcesdevotedfullyintegratedwilllearnnecessaryalsopreparedprofessionalpersonalethicalchallengesarisecaringCONCLUSIONS:concludeimprovedprepareprovidersmanifestRecommendationscurriculumstudents:careerdistinguished

Similar Articles

Cited By