Use of Metaphor as an Explanation Tool in Adverse Childhood Experiences Simulation Training.

Q2 Social Sciences The Permanente journal Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Epub Date: 2023-10-25 DOI:10.7812/TPP/22.159
Monica Ha, Allyson Rowe, Katlynn Hendrix, Summer Anwar, Khup Mang, Frances Wen, Kim Coon, Jedediah Bragg, Kristin Foulks, Julie Miller-Cribbs, Martina Jelley
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Abstract

Introduction: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have profound implications for adult health. Health care practitioners need effective communication tools for trauma-sensitive inquiries with patients. This study aimed to describe characteristics of effective metaphor use by health care trainees when discussing ACEs and health with adult patients, and to provide example metaphors for clinicians to use to sensitively address ACEs.

Methods: Trainees engaged in a videorecorded simulation as part of a model to teach health care practitioners communication skills related to ACEs. Videos were identified in which the trainee used a metaphor to help explain ACEs during the encounter. Encounter segments that used metaphors were transcribed and metaphor type, duration, and recurrence were coded using a standardized rubric. Each metaphor was scored for effectiveness and basic statistical analysis was conducted.

Results: Of the 122 videos reviewed, 24 types of metaphors were used, with the most common being the overloaded backpack (n = 24). Mean metaphor duration was 37 s (SD = 24 s). Metaphors rated as effective were shorter and less variable in duration (31.8 s, SD = 14.7 s) than those rated as ineffective (39 s, SD = 34 s). No one metaphor performed significantly better and most of the metaphors were evaluated as being adequate or effective.

Conclusion: Literary devices like metaphors may be efficient and effective explanatory tools to improve clinician communication skills and patient understanding in addressing sensitive topics, such as ACEs. Minimal time investment is required to employ metaphors in ACEs discussions. The authors found no single metaphor that to be clearly superior, indicating that patient-centered metaphor use may improve communication between clinicians and patients who experienced childhood trauma.

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隐喻在童年不良经历模拟训练中的解释作用
引言儿童不良经历(ACE)对成人健康有着深远的影响。卫生保健从业者需要有效的沟通工具来与患者进行创伤敏感的询问。本研究旨在描述医疗保健受训人员在与成年患者讨论ACE和健康时有效使用隐喻的特征,并为临床医生提供示例隐喻,以敏感地解决ACE问题。方法作为模型的一部分,受训人员进行视频录制模拟,教授医护人员与ACE相关的沟通技能。在视频中,受训者使用了一个比喻来帮助解释遭遇中的ACE。使用隐喻的遭遇片段被转录,隐喻类型、持续时间和重复使用标准化的量规进行编码。对每个隐喻的有效性进行评分,并进行基本的统计分析。结果在122段视频中,共使用了24种隐喻,其中最常见的是超载背包(n=24)。隐喻的平均持续时间为37秒(SD=24秒)。被评为有效的隐喻比被评为无效的隐喻(39秒,SD=34秒)更短,持续时间变化更小(31.8秒,SD=14.7s)。没有一个隐喻表现得更好,大多数隐喻被评估为充分或有效。结论隐喻等文学手段可能是提高临床医生沟通技能和患者理解敏感话题(如ACE)的有效解释工具。在ACE讨论中使用隐喻需要最少的时间投入。作者没有发现任何一个隐喻是明显优越的,这表明以患者为中心的隐喻使用可以改善临床医生和经历过童年创伤的患者之间的沟通。
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来源期刊
The Permanente journal
The Permanente journal Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
86
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