With ever-growing pressures on the NHS, dealing with angry or frustrated patients and their relatives has become increasingly common for those working in healthcare.
But what if doctors could practise navigating angry conversations with patients and their relatives in virtual reality before having to do so face-to-face?
Doctors and other healthcare professionals will get the chance to do precisely that, using technology developed by a British company for the Royal Society of Medicine - one of the UKs leading providers of continuing learning for healthcare professionals.
Bodyswaps, a virtual reality company, working with educationalists at the RSM, has developed a simulation enhanced by AI software to help doctors to improve their ability to identify anger signals, recognise how different responses can diffuse or exacerbate anger, remain calm in hostile situations, and move the situation forward with empathy.
Doctors and medical students will wear VR headsets to meet virtual patients and family members in emotionally charged scenarios. One situation tasks them with communicating with an upset husband who believes that there is a lack of urgency from the medical team about his wife's breast cancer Another situation asks doctors to deal with an unhappy and uncooperative elderly man who has started to develop urinary incontinence.
The software analytics measure the extent to which learners defuse or aggravate the patient or relative’s anger through the composition of their speech and non-verbal communication, such as eye contact, pace, volume, intonation and hand gestures.
At the beginning and end of the immersive module, doctors are asked to complete a self-reflection questionnaire to see how much their confidence levels have improved from the training.
One healthcare professional working in primary care, and who asked not to be named, said that around one in 50 patients he treated was now abusive, commenting that
A post-pandemic survey of 1,000 GPs* showed that almost three-quarters (74%) experienced increased levels of patient abuse compared with before.
*Source: Pulse, September 2021
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