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‘They’ve just got symptoms without science’: Medical trainees’ acquisition of negative attitudes towards patients with medically unexplained symptoms
Abstract
Objective
Doctors find patients
with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) challenging to manage and some
hold negative attitudes towards these patients. It is unknown when and
how these views form. This study examines medical trainees’ beliefs and
influences about MUS.
Methods
Semi-structured
interviews with 43 medical trainees. Using an iterative approach,
initial emergent themes were explored in subsequent interviews. Data
generation continued until thematic saturation was achieved.
Results
Participants
had received no training in MUS but had developed views about causes
and management. They struggled with the concept of ‘diagnosis by
exclusion’. Attitudes towards patients had developed through informal
clinical observation and interactions with doctors. Many welcomed formal
training but identified a need to integrate theoretical learning with
clinical application.
Conclusion
Despite
limited teaching, medical trainees are aware of the challenges in
diagnosing and managing patients with MUS, acquiring attitudes through a
hidden curriculum. To be welcomed, training must be evidence-based,
theoretically informed, but clinically applicable.
Practical implications
Current
medical training fails to equip doctors to engage with MUS and
potentially fosters the development of unhelpful views of these
patients. Informed teaching on diagnosis and management of MUS is
necessary at a trainee level to limit the development of negative
attitudes.
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