TCOM gives medical students unique training in patient communication

Medical students learn far more about how disease changes a life when they talk to real patients. That’s why UNTHSC’s  Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine invites people with various health conditions to its Fort Worth campus to be interviewed by these physicians-in-training.

“We are unique in using actual patients to train students in clinical communication,” said Susan Franks, PhD, Associate Professor of Family Medicine. “We need more patients to volunteer – those with kidney conditions, heart conditions, lung and respiratory conditions, diabetes, leukemia and lymphoma and other concerns.”

If you come in to be interviewed, you will be paid $50 for an afternoon. No physical exam is required. Your willingness to share your medical history deepens students’ understanding of how disease affects quality of life.

“A principle of osteopathic practice is treating the whole patient, managing day-to-day impact of the disease,” Dr. Franks said. “You don’t get that readily from a biomedical textbook or from lab reports.”

Second-year TCOM student Jennifer Brekke agrees.

“In the interviews, I see how illness affects real people,” she said. “They’re not just a group of symptoms. I learn how a person’s daily life and physical, mental and emotional status is changed by a diagnosis.”

Said Dr. Franks, “Our patient-interviewees know they’re helping educate future doctors. People want to be understood; to be understood by your physician is truly being cared for.”

Echoing that sentiment is interviewee Beulah Nash, a retired licensed vocational nurse with multiple health conditions.

“I’m so glad to be able to help in some small way,” she said. “I’m happy to be a part of their education, and it’s helpful to me, talking with the students. One of the students saw me outside the elevator after interviewing me and said, ‘I was thinking about your case and about how it has affected you.’ And I told him, ‘You’re going to make a good doctor.'”

Nash, who worked as an LVN from 1994 to 2005, said she wishes she had been given an opportunity to interview patients during her training. She calls the UNT Health Science Center “a godsend to students.”

Recent News

Hsc Pt In Dc
  • Our People
|May 2, 2024

HSC students highlight importance of physical therapy in D.C.

Prior to coming to The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth, Do Kyung Yun advocated alongside community members in his Los Angeles neighborhood. As a community organizer, Yun, a second-year physical therapy student who is known to friends as “DK,” used to frequent meetin...
58ea6a4e 2ebd 4474 Aa12 D704cc7e3475
  • Our People
|May 2, 2024

Dr. Tracy Hicks reelected board member-at-large of the Fellows of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners

Tracy Hicks, DNP, MBA, APRN, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC, CARN-AP, FIAAN, FAANP, associate professor at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s College of Nursing, was recently re-elected as board member-at-large of the Fellows of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners. ...
Justin New
  • Our People
|May 2, 2024

SaferCare Texas appoints new director

Justin Burton has been appointed as the new director of SaferCare Texas, The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth's department dedicated to enhancing patient safety initiatives across the state. Burton is a registered nurse with more than 20 years of experience....
Phillips
  • Community
|May 1, 2024

2024 Faculty Achievement Award winner named

On Wednesday, Dr. Nicole Phillips, assistant professor, microbiology, immunology and genetics, in the School of Biomedical Sciences was awarded The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s prestigious Faculty Achievement Award. The Faculty Achievement Award Committee annual...