Most people probably have heard about standardized patients and how some medical schools use them. Since I'm in med school, there was a good chance I was going to run into one. About a week and a half ago now, I had my first encounter with one.
Since our clinical class is focusing on history related stuff this semester one of our classes included a history taking workshop. It basically was a chance to practice some of our history taking skills, without any grading whatsoever. Lame as that may sound (and as I thought it sounded) it was actually a really useful experience.
For one, part of our final exam is based on a standardized patient encounter. Apparently that grade's based on both what and how we communicate. But I think that any chance to practice talking to patients is pretty useful. Practice talking to people? Weird some might say, myself included. But trying to get a pertinent history while making the encounter smooth and non-awkward is actually harder than it sounds. Mostly since we've got certain things that we're trying to elicit and learn about. And at this point, we're not too practiced in it, so it ends up being a checklist type of progression - as opposed to a more natural flow that would happen with a bigger knowledge base and more practice.
As for the actual encounter, there's a "patient" waiting in an exam room, with their chief complaint, age, and sex on a chart outside the door. Oh, and the exam room has a camera in which you are both taped and watched. Take a gander, knock, enter, and fire away. For the workshop, the patient gave feedback on the personal communication aspects; the classmate (through the camera) on the medical aspects of the interview. For the final, the patient will give feedback on both personal and medical communication. And there'll also be a written part in which questions will be asked based on questions that we were supposed to ask. AKA - what, if any, past surgical history did the patient have? What family history, if any, is related to the chief complaint? Patient's tobacco, alcohol, drug, and sexual histories? Didn't remember to ask those? Oops.
I actually wish we had more workshops like this, since we don't get many opportunities to practice history taking. Sure we're in the hospital and clinic throughout the year. But in the hospital (especially the VA), most patients are unable to communicate effectively and/or unwilling to. In clinic, my peds doc doesn't present many chances to take a real history. He's on a schedule, and doesn't really allow time for a slower, more comprehensive history that I'm trying to learn. Both these situations are things that I'll have to deal with eventually. Just not now, when I'm trying to figure out what things to ask and how to ask them. Regarding the latter, one comes to mind.
During the "review of systems" part, I was trying to ask about the urinary system. In trying to think and talk at the same time, things didn't work out so well. "Urinary problems? Having any...not so much, or...?" Immediately after I said that, I thought "did those words just come out of *my* mouth??" WTF is wrong with me?
Overall, the patient said I did fine, although I would disagree with that evaluation. As for the medical aspects, I definitely missed quite a few things - one of them being past medical history and a gamut of related questions. Oops. You'd think that'd be something that would come naturally, since it's kind of a big deal. Stupid checklists and having to remember stuff. At least I found out the patient didn't have any urinary problems.