2019
DOI: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10865
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ERASE-ing Patient Mistreatment of Trainees: Faculty Workshop

Abstract: Introduction: Mistreatment of physicians by patients is a long-standing phenomenon that has garnered increased attention recently. Medical students and residents also experience mistreatment, and many supervising physicians do not know how to recognize it or respond appropriately. Little guidance exists as to how faculty should best address these situations. We developed, taught, and evaluated a stepwise approach to help faculty physicians manage patient mistreatment of trainees (residents and students). Metho… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(30 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
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“…16 Given the power that faculty and peers have to change or reinforce clinical culture norms, 9 the workshop also emphasizes the importance of bystander intervention. [9][10][11] After participating in the workshop, all physicians will have developed and rehearsed a script for responding in their own words to verbal harassment toward themselves and a trainee.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…16 Given the power that faculty and peers have to change or reinforce clinical culture norms, 9 the workshop also emphasizes the importance of bystander intervention. [9][10][11] After participating in the workshop, all physicians will have developed and rehearsed a script for responding in their own words to verbal harassment toward themselves and a trainee.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous authors in MedEdPORTAL have described curricula for faculty on responding to patient mistreatment of medical trainees; however, their work has focused on directly observed mistreatment. To our knowledge, there are only two modules 5 , 10 in MedEdPORTAL on addressing patient mistreatment of medical trainees. Like the ERASE curriculum of Wilkins and colleagues, 10 , 11 our module uses an interactive workshop to teach communication tools for responding to discriminatory comments made by patients.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…43,45 Despite recognition that is robust, dedicated faculty training is a prerequisite for effective curricular development and implementation, 4 faculty development efforts focused on anti-racist teaching, and dialoguing about race, racism, and white privilege are scarce. Some important work has been done with respect to interpersonal manifestations of racism, like supporting trainees in the face of microaggressions and mistreatment 45, 46 and acknowledging implicit bias. 47 Indeed, though curricula that focus on individual-level factors (implicit bias and microaggressions) may increase awareness of the negative experiences of URiM trainees and physicians, this "consciousness raising" 48 can create a false perception of change if the increased dialogue about interpersonal bias is not accompanied by efforts to identify and correct the systemic racist structures present within our institutions.…”
Section: Existing Anti-racist Curriculamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During this meeting, it is important for the faculty to remain receptive to systemic or structural factors leading to the learner's lapse in professionalism, such as a suboptimal learning environment due to implicit bias and microaggression, or learner mistreatment by faculty or other healthcare professionals, or mistreatment from patients and families 37–39 . These structural factors may negatively affect the learners’ behaviors, especially when few are trained to manage the response and associated emotions 40 …”
Section: Area Of Focus: Professionalism and Interpersonal And Communimentioning
confidence: 99%