加利福尼亚州和佛罗里达州妇产科住院医生的避孕咨询培训经历和行为。

Jewel A Brown, Serena H Ly, Janese A Thompson, Matthew D Ponizini, Mitchell D Creinin, Melissa J Chen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的: 描述加利福尼亚州和佛罗里达州妇产科住院医师培训中避孕咨询培训和提供的经验:研究设计:我们从 2022 年 9 月到 2023 年 2 月对加利福尼亚州和佛罗里达州的 19 个妇产科住院医师培训项目(约有 428 名住院医师)进行了一项混合方法研究。我们询问了参与者使用分层有效性咨询的频率、他们对避孕咨询实践的满意度,以及目睹和识别避孕胁迫的经历。我们还询问了患者拒绝接受长效可逆避孕药物 (LARC) 时的个人失望情绪,以及来自教员要求开具 LARC 处方的压力。为了进一步探讨住院医生的避孕咨询教育和行为,我们对 20 名调查志愿者中的一部分进行了半结构化电话访谈:我们收到了 155 名参与者(36.2%)的调查回复。大多数参与者(n=113 [76.4%])表示经常或总是使用分层有效性咨询。虽然很少有参与者(n=17 [11.3%])表示感受到了来自教职员工说服患者保留 LARC 的压力,但也有一些参与者(n=34 [22.1%])表示,当患者选择去除 LARC 时,他们经常或总是感到失望,与加利福尼亚州(n=15 [14.6%],p=0.01)相比,佛罗里达州的参与者表示失望的更多(n=19 [37.3%])。我们从电话访谈中发现了两大主题。首先,住院医师认为他们在如何提供避孕咨询方面接受的正规教育有限,通常是通过模仿指导教师或同行的咨询方式来学习这些做法。其次,通过与指导教师和同行的反馈和互动,住院医师非正式地了解到,成功的避孕咨询是说服患者使用高效避孕方法的能力:结论:当住院医师缺乏正规的避孕咨询教育时,他们采取的咨询行为可能不会以患者为中心:当妇产科住院医师缺乏正规的避孕咨询教育时,他们在培训期间学习的做法可能会导致胁迫性咨询行为。住院医师教育应包括识别和减少避孕胁迫以及以患者为中心的咨询,这既要通过正规的课程,也要在医学教育期间对学员进行社会化教育。
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Contraceptive counseling training experiences and behaviors among obstetrics and gynecology residents in California and Florida.

Objective: To describe experiences with contraception counseling training and provision of obstetrics and gynecology residents training in California and Florida.

Study design: We conducted a mixed-methods study of obstetrics and gynecology residents training across 19 programs (with approximately 428 residents) in California and Florida from September 2022 through February 2023. We asked participants how often they use tiered-effectiveness counseling, their satisfaction with contraception counseling practices, and experiences with witnessing and recognizing contraception coercion. We asked about personal disappointment when patients decline long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) and pressure from faculty to prescribe LARC. To further explore resident contraception counseling education and behaviors, we conducted semi-structured telephone interviews with a subset of 20 survey volunteers.

Results: We received survey responses from 155 (36.2%) participants. Most (n = 113 [76.4%]) often or always reported using tiered-effectiveness counseling. While few participants (n = 17 [11.3%]) reported feeling pressure from faculty to convince a patient to keep a LARC, some (n = 34 [22.1%]) reported they often or always feel disappointed when a patient chooses LARC removal, with more Florida participants reporting disappointment (n = 19 [37.3%]) compared to California (n = 15 [14.6%], p = 0.01). We identified two main themes from the telephone interviews. First, residents feel they have limited formal education on how to provide contraceptive counseling and commonly learn these practices by emulating supervising faculty or peer counseling styles. Second, residents are informally taught, through feedback and interactions with supervising faculty and peers, that successful contraception counseling is the ability to convince patients to use highly effective contraception.

Conclusion: When residents lack formalized contraception counseling education, they adopt counseling behaviors that may not be patient centered.

Implications: When obstetrics and gynecology residents lack formalized contraception counseling education, they learn practices that may lead to coercive counseling behaviors during training. Resident education should include recognition and mitigation of contraception coercion and patient-centered counseling both through a formalized curriculum and socialization of trainees during their medical education.

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