Derogatory and cynical humour directed towards patients: views of residents and attending doctors.

Title

Derogatory and cynical humour directed towards patients: views of residents and attending doctors.

Creator

Wear D; Aultman JM; Zarconi J; Varley JD

Publisher

Medical education

Date

2009
2009-01

Description

CONTEXT A study of medical students' perspectives on derogatory and cynical humour was published in 2006. The current study examines residents' and attending doctors' perspectives on the same phenomenon in three clinical departments of psychiatry, internal medicine and surgery. METHODS Two focus groups were conducted in each of the three clinical departments, one with residents and one with attending doctors, during the 2006-07 academic year. Seventy doctors participated, including 49 residents and 21 attendings. The same semi-structured format was used in each group. Questions focused on characterisations of derogatory and cynical humour along with motives and rules for its use. All focus groups were audiotaped and the tapes transcribed. Each transcript was read independently by each researcher as part of an inductive process to discover the categories that describe and explain the uses, motives and effects of such humour. RESULTS Three categories that appeared in the first study with medical students – locations for humour, the humour game, and not-funny humour – emerged as virtually identical, whereas two others - objects of humour and motives for humour - were more fully elaborated. DISCUSSION Discussions of derogatory and cynical humour should occur in any department where teaching and role modelling are priorities. In addition, the tenets of appreciative inquiry and the complex responsive process, particularly as they are used at the Indiana University School of Medicine, offer medical educators valuable tools for addressing this phenomenon.

Subject

Physician-Patient Relations; Focus Groups; Human; Descriptive Statistics; Audiorecording; Wit and Humor; Teaching Methods – Evaluation; Physicians – Psychosocial Factors; Interns and Residents – Psychosocial Factors

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Pages

34–41

Issue

1

Volume

43

Citation

Wear D; Aultman JM; Zarconi J; Varley JD, “Derogatory and cynical humour directed towards patients: views of residents and attending doctors.,” NEOMED Bibliography Database, accessed April 23, 2024, https://neomed.omeka.net/items/show/6042.