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The surgical resident experience in serious illness communication: A qualitative needs assessment with proposed solutions

Abstract

Background

Serious illness communication skills are important tools for surgeons, but training in residency is limited.

Methods

Thirteen senior surgical residents at an academic center were interviewed about their experiences with serious illness communication. Conventional content analysis was performed using established communication frameworks and inductive development of themes.

Results

Residents had frequent conversations and employed known communication strategies. Three themes highlighted challenges they face. Illness severity included factors attributed to the illness that made serious illness communication more challenging: symptoms, poor prognosis, and urgency. Knowledge and feelings included the factual understanding and emotional experience of residents, patients, and families. Academic structure included hierarchy and the residents' dual role as learners and teachers. On reflection, residents identified needing greater experiential practice, analogous to learning procedural skills.

Conclusions

Surgical residents regularly face serious illness conversations with little training beyond observation of role models. Dedicated training may help meet this need.

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