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Teaching Medical Students to Communicate Risks Like Military Intelligence Analysts.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Brooks, JS; Muller, D; Campbell, P; Yu, A; Southwell, B; Korin, M
Published in: J Med Educ Curric Dev
2024

Communication about health often involves descriptions of risk: the probability or likelihood of an unfavorable outcome. Communicating risk helps individuals make choices about their own health by building understanding of potential outcomes and providing context for the importance of procedures, health interventions, and lifestyle choices. However, medical education in the United States does not provide future physicians with adequate statistical literacy to communicate risk effectively and rarely encourages them to practice communicating risk in pre-clinical years. Risk communication in military intelligence, a field with formalized risk language and training, offers a unique perspective into potential improvements for medical risk communication. With backgrounds in the military, public health, communication, surgery, and medical education, the authors offer the following recommendations to improve risk communication for medical students. (1) Encourage the use of numerical absolute risk when communicating among health practitioners to avoid varied interpretations of what different risk descriptors ("uncommon," "likely," or "low") might mean; (2) build efficient, teachable skills in use of patient-facing risk communication tools like comparative probabilities and visual aids; and (3) practice estimating risk through role-play of risk communication between medical students and standardized patients. By improving risk communication in medical education, future doctors will be better equipped to build trust through open communication and improve the health of the patients and the communities for whom they care.

Duke Scholars

Published In

J Med Educ Curric Dev

DOI

ISSN

2382-1205

Publication Date

2024

Volume

11

Start / End Page

23821205241278182

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • 3901 Curriculum and pedagogy
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Brooks, J. S., Muller, D., Campbell, P., Yu, A., Southwell, B., & Korin, M. (2024). Teaching Medical Students to Communicate Risks Like Military Intelligence Analysts. J Med Educ Curric Dev, 11, 23821205241278184. https://doi.org/10.1177/23821205241278182
Brooks, James S., David Muller, Peter Campbell, Allen Yu, Brian Southwell, and Maya Korin. “Teaching Medical Students to Communicate Risks Like Military Intelligence Analysts.J Med Educ Curric Dev 11 (2024): 23821205241278184. https://doi.org/10.1177/23821205241278182.
Brooks JS, Muller D, Campbell P, Yu A, Southwell B, Korin M. Teaching Medical Students to Communicate Risks Like Military Intelligence Analysts. J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2024;11:23821205241278184.
Brooks, James S., et al. “Teaching Medical Students to Communicate Risks Like Military Intelligence Analysts.J Med Educ Curric Dev, vol. 11, 2024, p. 23821205241278184. Pubmed, doi:10.1177/23821205241278182.
Brooks JS, Muller D, Campbell P, Yu A, Southwell B, Korin M. Teaching Medical Students to Communicate Risks Like Military Intelligence Analysts. J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2024;11:23821205241278184.

Published In

J Med Educ Curric Dev

DOI

ISSN

2382-1205

Publication Date

2024

Volume

11

Start / End Page

23821205241278182

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • 3901 Curriculum and pedagogy