Respecting patient choices: Using the 'Go Wish' cards as a teaching tool

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BMJ Publishing Group

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Background: Individuals have different values and priorities that can have an important impact on their medical management. Understanding this concept can help physicians provide medical care that is in line with the goals of their patients. Communicating this message effectively to students is challenging. Objective: To report our experience with using Go Wish cards in the medical education setting. Design: A thematic analysis of student reflection papers using grounded theory. Setting/Subjects: Second-year medical students participated in an activity using the Go Wish cards as part of a course module on palliative care. The activity aimed to encourage students to reflect on their own choices at the end of life and to highlight that different people have different priorities. Results: Forty-two students (42%) mentioned the Go Wish activity in their reflections on the module. They reported that the activity demonstrated the different priorities at the end of life, it illustrated the importance of providing personalised care, it promoted self-discovery, it transformed their view of death and dying, and it increased their appreciation of the importance of palliative care. Conclusion: Go Wish cards can be used to help illustrate the variability in priorities of patients. They can be used as an effective to teach medical students about the importance of considering patient preferences when illness progresses. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

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Disease management, Education, medical, Grounded theory, Humans, Palliative care, Patient participation, Patient preference, Physician-patient relations, Students, medical, Terminal care, Adult, Article, Clinical article, Death, Female, Human, Male, Medical education, Medical student, Palliative therapy, Thematic analysis, Doctor patient relation, Standards

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