Assessment of a medical student mentoring programme to improve attitudes related to grief and coping with death
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Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the impact of a mentoring programme for medical students doing a
palliative care rotation, aimed at improving coping with death and attitudes towards the suffering
produced by illness.
Methods: A quasi-experimental study without a control group was carried out on second-year
medical students. Five 1-h group sessions were conducted. Attitudes towards grief and coping
with death were assessed before the mentoring programme began and afterwards, using the Brief
Humanizar Scale and the Bugen’s Coping with Death Scale, respectively.
Results: In terms of the sense of grieving as measured by the Brief Humanizar Scale, the mean
score for the ‘Burden’ factor was 7 points and for the ‘Change’ factor it was 28.6, indicating that
suffering makes more sense as a lever for positive change than as a burden. Regarding Bugen’s
Coping with Death Scale, the mean score was 127.8 points before the mentoring programme and
139.2 afterwards. Hence, the score after the mentoring programme increased by 11.4 points,
improving strategies to cope with death.
Conclusion: Medical professionals must cope with death and end-of-life patients. In addition to
scientific knowledge, students need to acquire competencies for better coping with the death of
patients, with mentoring programmes helping to enhance this process of learning.
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Bibliographic citation
Álvarez-Montero, S., Crespí, P., Gómez-Salgado, J., Ramírez-Durán, M. V., Rodríguez-Gabriel, M. del P., & Coronado-Vázquez, V. (2023). Assessment of a medical student mentoring programme to improve attitudes related to grief and coping with death. In Heliyon (Vol. 9, Issue 10, p. e20959). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20959














