• J Gen Intern Med · Aug 2024

    CALMER Conflict: A Novel Curriculum for Graduating Medical Students to Manage and Defuse Patient-Provider Conflict.

    • Jordan See, Reed Van Deusen, Rene Claxton, Neeta Shenai, Scott D Rothenberger, and Anna K Donovan.
    • General Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. Jordansee.tampa@gmail.com.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Aug 5.

    BackgroundWorkplace violence disproportionately affects healthcare workers and verbal aggression from patients frequently occurs. While verbal de-escalation is the first-line approach to defusing anger, there is a lack of consistent curricula or robust evaluation in undergraduate medical education.AimTo develop a medical school curriculum focused on de-escalation skills for adult patients and evaluate effectiveness with surveys and an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE).SettingWe implemented this curriculum in the "Get Ready for Residency Bootcamp" of a single large academic institution in 2023.ParticipantsForty-four fourth-year medical students PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: The curriculum consisted of an interactive didactic focused on our novel CALMER framework that prioritized six evidence-based de-escalation skills and a separate standardized patient practice session.Program EvaluationThe post-curriculum survey (82% response rate) found a significant increase from 2.79 to 4.11 out of 5 (p ≤ 0.001) in confidence using verbal de-escalation. Preparedness improved with every skill and curriculum satisfaction averaged 4.79 out of 5. The OSCE found no differences in skill level between students who received the curriculum and those who did not.DiscussionThis evidence-based and replicable de-escalation skill curriculum improves medical student confidence and preparedness in managing agitated patients.© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.

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