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Opioid Use Disorder Curriculum: Medicine Clerkship Standardized Patient Case, Small-Group Activity, and Patient Panel

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Journal MedEdPORTAL
Date 2022 Jun 13
PMID 35692601
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Abstract

Introduction: The overdose crisis remains a critical public health problem, creating an urgent need to train physicians in the treatment and management of opioid use disorder (OUD). Our medicine clerkship module aimed to close this gap by training and assessing students' motivational interviewing skills, harm reduction knowledge, and use of nonstigmatizing language in the treatment of patients with OUD.

Methods: We evaluated the impact of a small-group, case-based activity and patient panel on the clinical documentation skills of students in a medicine clerkship. Clinical documentation was based on an observed structured clinical examination of a standardized patient with OUD and was evaluated using a grading rubric that followed the module learning objectives. Students also submitted reflections on the curriculum.

Results: Qualitative responses ( = 40) from students evaluating the small-group activity and patient panel exercise revealed overall student satisfaction with the patient panel and exposure to patients living with OUD. Three themes emerged from student reflections: (1) humanity, (2) different paths to recovery, and (3) using nonstigmatizing language. For the quantitative test, students' ( = 39) mean clinical documentation scores before and after the small-group activity and patient panel increased from 10.1 to 11.3 out of 13.5 possible points. There was a significant difference between mean pretest and posttest scores ( < .001).

Discussion: The medicine clerkship provided an acceptable and feasible opportunity for implementing a multifaceted educational experience for students with significant immediate impact on their evaluation of patients with OUD.

Citing Articles

Integrating Persons With Lived Experience in Opioid Use Disorder Education: A Small Group Exercise and Patient Panel.

Serota D, Tookes H, Tomita-Barber J, Bartholomew T, Forrest D, St Onge J J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2023; 10:23821205231180172.

PMID: 37342657 PMC: 10278406. DOI: 10.1177/23821205231180172.

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