Promoting interdisciplinarity and the timely integration of palliative care through the development and implementation of a blended learning elective for medical students

Background: Given demographic changes and a rising prevalence of oncological diseases, understanding the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and a timely integration of palliative care is crucial. However, both are underrepresented in medical curricula. To address this gap, we introduced a...

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Main Authors: Batzler, Yann-Nicolas, Schallenburger, Manuela, Sammer, Tabea, Haussmann, Jan, Tamaskovics, Bálint, Rehlinghaus, Marc, von Schreitter, Julia, Otten, Stefanie, Fohler, Corinna, Schwartz, Jacqueline, Karger, André, Niegisch, Günter, Neukirchen, Martin
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2025-04-01
Series:GMS Journal for Medical Education
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Online Access:https://journals.publisso.de/en/journals/jme/volume42/zma001748
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Summary:Background: Given demographic changes and a rising prevalence of oncological diseases, understanding the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and a timely integration of palliative care is crucial. However, both are underrepresented in medical curricula. To address this gap, we introduced a new elective in which students follow the journey of a fictitious patient with prostate cancer from diagnosis until death. Method: The elective was conducted through repeated joint meetings by a multi-professional and interdisciplinary (palliative care, urology, radiation oncology, psychosomatic medicine) team. Alongside its development, an outcome evaluation was designed to assess satisfaction (Likert scale) and learning gains (comparative self-assessment, CSA [%]). After pilot testing, the content and structure were adapted. The elective followed a blended learning approach. The content covered guideline-adherent treatment of prostate cancer, breaking bad news, initial contact with palliative care, symptom control based on the total pain concept. Results: Students (n=8) expressed high satisfaction. They found the structure comprehensible and considered the content valuable for medical practice. Students gained knowledge, especially in defining total pain (83%) and the indication of the timely integration of specialized palliative care (77%). Conclusion: Using prostate cancer as an example disease, we integrated multiple disciplines into treatment strategies, demonstrating the benefits of multi-professional and multidisciplinary collaboration. This approach aids in identifying patients who could benefit from palliative care. Our concept is adaptable to other tumor types and settings, enhancing awareness of patient-centered issues that are often overlooked in medical curricula.
ISSN:2366-5017