Abstract

Background:

Lack of smoking cessation education in undergraduate medical training hinders healthcare professionals in providing adequate tobacco cessation counselling. We developed a comprehensive 4-h smoking cessation counselling course for medical students that is easy to incorporate in a medical school curriculum, and assessed its short-term outcome for knowledge, skills, and attitudes.

Methods:

Eighty-eight medical students (53f, 35 m) were educated by a doctoral student in five identical 4-h courses. A 45-min theoretical introduction was followed by patient-physician role-playing by student pairs. Knowledge, skills, and attitude were assessed before and 4 weeks after the course by questionnaires, and by blinded analysis of pre- and post-course videos of a five-minute standardized patient situation.

Results:

Knowledge: Before the course 10.6 (mean, SD: 2.7) questions out of 29 were answered correctly, and increased to 19.2 (3.6) after the course (p < 0.0005). Major features of the students’ counselling skills improved. Significant and highly relevant attitude changes reflected increased motivation to counselling smokers.

Conclusions:

Implementing a four-hour smoking intervention workshop into a medical curriculum was highly effective in improving students’ knowledge, skills and attitudes towards smoking counselling, as well as providing them with additional clinical competencies.

Details

Title
Outcome of a four-hour smoking cessation counselling workshop for medical students
Author
Purkabiri, Kurosch; Steppacher, Valentina; Bernardy, Kathrin; Karl, Nikola; Vedder, Verena; Borgmann, Michèle; Rogausch, Anja; Uz Stammberger; Bals, Robert; Raupach, Tobias; Koellner, Volker; Hamacher, Jürg
Section
RESEARCH PAPER
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Nov 2016
Publisher
European Publishing
e-ISSN
16179625
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2586493324
Copyright
© 2016. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.