Tobacco dependence treatment teaching by medical school clerkship preceptors: survey responses from more than 1,000 US medical students

To determine factors associated with tobacco cessation counseling in medical school clerkships. Third-year medical students at 10 medical schools across the United States completed a 100-item survey, measuring the frequency with which they experienced their preceptors providing clinical teaching com...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPreventive medicine Vol. 57; no. 2; pp. 81 - 86
Main Authors Geller, Alan C, Hayes, Rashelle B, Leone, Frank, Churchill, Linda C, Leung, Katherine, Reed, George, Jolicoeur, Denise, Okuliar, Catherine, Adams, Michael, Murray, David M, Liu, Qin, Waugh, Jonathan, David, Sean, Ockene, Judith K
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.08.2013
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Summary:To determine factors associated with tobacco cessation counseling in medical school clerkships. Third-year medical students at 10 medical schools across the United States completed a 100-item survey, measuring the frequency with which they experienced their preceptors providing clinical teaching components: clear instruction, feedback, modeling behavior, setting clear objectives, and responding to questions about tobacco dependence counseling as well as frequency of use of tobacco prompts and office systems. Our primary dependent measure was student self-reported skill level for items of tobacco dependence treatment (e.g. "5As"). Surveys were completed by 1213 students. For both family medicine and internal medicine clerkships, modeling and providing clear instruction on ways to provide tobacco counseling were reported most commonly. In contrast, providing feedback and clear objectives for tobacco dependence treatment lagged behind. Overall, students who reported preceptors' provision of optimal clinical teaching components and office system prompts in both family medicine and internal medicine clerkships had higher self-reported skill (P<0.001) than students with no exposure or exposure during only one of the clerkships. Future educational interventions intended to help students adopt effective tobacco dependence treatment techniques should be engineered to facilitate these critical precepting components.
Bibliography:Dr. Murray’s research on this paper was conducted prior to his start at the National Institutes of Health
ISSN:0091-7435
1096-0260
DOI:10.1016/j.ypmed.2013.04.006