Veidlapa Nr. M-3 (8)
Study Course Description

Psychological aspects of hematologic diseases

Main Study Course Information

Course Code
RHE_040
Branch of Science
Clinical medicine
ECTS
6.15
Target Audience
Medicine
LQF
Level 8

Study Course Implementer

Course Supervisor

Residency Speciality

Speciality
Supervisor of Medical Speciality
Contacts

-

About Study Course

Objective

-

Learning Outcomes

Knowledge

1.-

Skills

1.-

Competences

1.-

Assessment

Individual work

Title
% from total grade
Grade
1.

Individual work

-
-

Examination

Title
% from total grade
Grade
1.

Examination

-
-

Study Course Theme Plan

FULL-TIME
Part 1
  1. Seminar

Modality
Location
-
-

Topics

-
  1. Seminar

Modality
Location
-
-

Topics

-
  1. Seminar

Modality
Location
-
-

Topics

-
  1. Seminar

Modality
Location
-
-

Topics

-
Total ECTS (Creditpoints):
6.15
Number of Residency Seminars:
4
Length (weeks):
4
Final Examination:
Residency exam (Theory and practice)

Bibliography

Required Reading

1.

Alan Bleakley. Patient-Centred Medicine in Transition. The Heart of the Matter. Springer, 2014.

2.

Esquibel AY, Borkan J. Doctors and patients in pain: conflict and collaboration in opioid prescription in primary care. Pain. 2014;155:2575–2582.

3.

Matthias MS, Krebs EE, Collins LA, et al. “I’m Not Abusing or Anything”: patient-physician communication about opioid treatment in chronic pain. Patient Educ Couns. 2013;93: 197–202.

4.

Hinchey SA, Jackson JL. A cohort study assessing difficult patient encounters in a walk-in primary care clinic, predictors and outcomes. J Gen Intern Med. 2011;26:588–594.

5.

Staiger T, Jarvik J, Deyo R, et al. Patient-physician agreement as a predictor of outcomes in patients with back pain. J Gen Intern Med. 2005;20:935–937.

Additional Reading

1.

Michael Balint. The Doctor, his Patient and the Illness. International Universities Press, 1957.

2.

Hahn SR, Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, et al. The difficult patient: prevalence, psychopathology, and functional impairment. J Gen Intern Med. 1996;11:1–8.

3.

Patricia Hughes & Ian Kerr. Transference and countertransference in communication between doctor and patient. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment (2000), vol. 6, pp. 57–64.

4.

Gordon, T. Making the patient your partner: communication skills for doctors and other caregivers / Thomas Gordon and W. Sterling Edwards, Auburn House, 1997.

5.

Roter, D. Doctors talking with patients/patients talking with doctors : improving communication in medical visits. Debra L. Roter and Judith A. Hall. — 2nd ed., 2006.