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ABEM consensus for the brazilian medical schools’ communication curriculum

Abstract:

Introduction:

Communication is an essential competence for the physician and other professional categories, and must be developed their professional training. The creation of a communication project including a Brazilian consensus aimed to subsidize medical schools in preparing medical students to communicate effectively with Brazilian citizens, with plural intra and inter-regional characteristics, based on the professionalism and the Brazilian Unified System (SUS) principles.

Objective:

The objective of this manuscript is to present the consensus for the teaching of communication in Brazilian medical schools.

Method:

The consensus was built collaboratively with 276 participants, experts in communication, faculty, health professionals and students from 126 medical schools and five health institutions in face-to-face conference meetings and biweekly or monthly virtual meetings. In the meetings, the participants’ experiences and bibliographic material were shared, including international consensuses, and the consensus under construction was presented, with group discussion to list new components for the Brazilian consensus, followed by debate with everyone, to agree on them. The final version was approved in a virtual meeting with invitation to all participants in July 2021. After the submission, several changes were required, which demanded new meetings to review the consensus final version.

Result:

The consensus is based on assumptions that communication should be relationship-centered, embedded on professionalism, grounded on the SUS principles and social participation, and based on the National Guidelines for the undergraduate medical course, theoretical references and scientific evidence. Specific objectives to develop communication competence in the students are described, covering: theoretical foundations; literature search and its critical evaluation; documents drafting and editing; intrapersonal and interpersonal communication in the academicscientific environment, in health care and in health management; and, communication in diverse clinical contexts. The inclusion of communication in the curriculum is recommended from the beginning to the end of the course, integrated with other contents and areas of knowledge.

Conclusion:

It is expected that this consensus contributes the review or implementation of communication in Brazilian medical schools’ curricula.

Keywords:
Communication; Medical Schools; Curriculum; Undergraduate Medical Education; Consensus

Resumo:

Introdução:

A comunicação é uma competência essencial para o(a) médico(a) e outras categorias profissionais, e deve ser desenvolvida durante sua formação profissional. A elaboração de um projeto de comunicação, incluindo um consenso brasileiro, visou subsidiar as escolas médicas a preparar os estudantes de Medicina para se comunicarem efetivamente com os(as) cidadãos/cidadãs brasileiros(as), de características plurais intra e inter-regionais, pautando-se no profissionalismo e nos princípios do Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS).

Objetivo:

Este manuscrito apresenta o consenso para o ensino de comunicação nas escolas médicas brasileiras.

Método:

O consenso foi construído colaborativamente com 276 participantes, experts em comunicação, docentes, profissionais de saúde e discentes, de 126 escolas médicas e cinco instituições de saúde, ao longo de nove encontros presenciais em congressos e de encontros virtuais quinzenais ou mensais. Nos encontros, compartilharam-se as experiências dos participantes e o material bibliográfico, incluindo os consensos internacionais, e apresentou-se o consenso em construção, com discussão em grupos para elencar novos componentes para o consenso brasileiro, seguida por debate com todos para pactuá-los. A versão final foi aprovada em reunião virtual, com convite a todos(as) os(as) participantes em julho de 2021. Após submissão, diversas alterações foram requeridas, o que demandou novos encontros para revisão da versão final do consenso.

Resultado:

O consenso tem como pressupostos que a comunicação deve ser centrada nas relações, pautada nos princípios do SUS, na participação social e no profissionalismo, e embasada nas Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do curso de graduação em Medicina, em referenciais teóricos e nas evidências científicas. São descritos objetivos específicos para desenvolver a competência em comunicação nos estudantes, abrangendo: fundamentos teóricos; busca e avaliação crítica da literatura; elaboração e redação de documentos; comunicação intrapessoal e interpessoal no ambiente acadêmico-científico, na atenção à saúde em diversos contextos clínicos e na gestão em saúde. Recomenda-se a inserção curricular da comunicação do início ao final do curso, integrada a outros conteúdos e áreas de saber.

Conclusão:

Espera-se que esse consenso contribua para a revisão ou implementação da comunicação nos currículos das escolas médicas brasileiras.

Palavras-chave:
Comunicação; Escolas Médicas; Currículo; Educação de Graduação em Medicina; Consenso

INTRODUCTION

The word “communicate” derives from the Latin word communicare and means to share, to make public, to relate to, from which the word “commune” also originated, which means to share with everyone, to participate, to do something in common, to tune into feelings, thoughts and actions11. Houaiss A, Villar MS, Franco FMM. Dicionário Houaiss da língua portuguesa. Rio de Janeiro: Objetiva; 2001.. Thus, communication is relational and, as Araújo and Cardoso state, it is a “social practice”22. Araújo IS, Cardoso JM. Comunicação e saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2007.. For Paulo Freire, communication is an essential condition of human beings, and without it, human knowledge would be impossible, as the cultural and historical construction of human reality requires “intercommunication” and “intersubjectivity” based on dialogicity33. Freire P. Extensão ou comunicação? São Paulo: Paz e Terra; 2014.. Therefore, the educator, who aims to expand the perspectives and possibilities for the student’s assertion as a person in the society, through reflection and action on reality, must problematize the world, in a dialogic and solidary way33. Freire P. Extensão ou comunicação? São Paulo: Paz e Terra; 2014.),(44. Freire P. Pedagogia da autonomia: saberes necessários à autonomia. São Paulo: Paz e Terra ; 2004..

Therefore, the importance of dialogue should always be taken into account by educators/teachers of the medical course and physicians. In the past, however, teaching was teacher-centered and the clinical encounter was physician-centered and based on the biomedical model, focused on the disease, limiting the active participation of the students and those under medical care. In the teaching process, in clinical reasoning and in decision making, their knowledge, experiences, perspectives and practices, as well as their values, ​were not taken into account55. Roter D. The enduring and evolving nature of the patient-physician relationship. Patient Educ Couns. 2000;39(1):5-15.),(66. Kaba R, Sooriakumaran P. The evolution of the doctor-patient relationship. Int J Surg. 2007;5(1):57-65..

In health care, this reality started to change in the 1970s, when studies demonstrated that the biopsychosocial model77. Engel GL. The biopsychosocial model and the education of health professionals. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1978;310(1):169-81., encouraging the active participation of the person under care and attentive listening and empathy88. Rogers CR. The foundations of the person-centered approach. Education. 1979;100(2):98-107. generated better health outcomes. Some proven outcomes were: decrease of uncertainties in people under care and increase in their trust, security, adherence to the therapeutic plan, autonomy and responsibility for self-care, as well as better control of chronic diseases, including hypertension and diabetes and less stress, anxiety and depression. Family members also felt less anxious and stressed, and physicians achieved greater diagnostic accuracy and effectiveness in their care. As a result, everyone was more satisfied99. Stewart MA. Effective physician-patient communication and health outcomes: a review. CMAJ. 1995;152(9):1423-33.)-(1717. Riedl D, Schüßler G. The influence of doctor-patient communication on health outcomes: a systematic review. Z Psychosom Med Psychother. 2017;63(2):131-50..

The importance of communication in interdisciplinary and interprofessional teamwork was also verified - considering the person under care and their family members / caregivers as part of the team - for the prevention of avoidable harm in health care and, therefore, to ensure the safety of the person under care1818. World Health Organization, World Alliance for Patient Safety. Patients for patient safety: statement of case. Geneva; 2013 [acesso em 10 jan 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patients_for_patient/PFPS_brochure_2013.pdf .
https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patien...
)-(2525. Mickan SM. Evaluating the effectiveness of health care teams. Aust Health Rev. 2005; 29(2):211-7.. It was demonstrated that the greater effectiveness of collaborative work required a shared leadership, respect for all involved, with their listening, recognition and appreciation of their contribution to the team’s mission, and through frequent, assertive and conciliatory dialogue, would provide the fast and effective flow of information, the construction and maintenance of relations, clarity of roles and functions of each participant and the management of uncertainties, conflicts, adverse events and errors1818. World Health Organization, World Alliance for Patient Safety. Patients for patient safety: statement of case. Geneva; 2013 [acesso em 10 jan 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patients_for_patient/PFPS_brochure_2013.pdf .
https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patien...
)-(2727. O’Connor P, Byrne D, O’Dea A, McVeigh TP, Kerin MJ. “Excuse me”: teaching interns to speak up. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2013;39(9):426-31.. As a result, the person under care accepts the treatment better, has better health outcomes, takes less risks and feels more satisfied; team members work more effectively and feel greater well-being; and, there is greater efficiency in the services provided by the team and access to care, and the hospital length of stay, unplanned hospitalizations and institutional costs are reduced1818. World Health Organization, World Alliance for Patient Safety. Patients for patient safety: statement of case. Geneva; 2013 [acesso em 10 jan 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patients_for_patient/PFPS_brochure_2013.pdf .
https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patien...
)-(2727. O’Connor P, Byrne D, O’Dea A, McVeigh TP, Kerin MJ. “Excuse me”: teaching interns to speak up. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2013;39(9):426-31..

On the other hand, it was found that when communication in teamwork was ineffective, there were more errors in health care, including delays in diagnosis and treatment and an increase in medication and procedural errors1919. World Health Organization. WHO patient safety curriculum guide: multi-professional edition. Geneva: WHO. 2011. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241501958 . Acesso 10 jan. 2021. [Marra VN, Sette ML, coordenadores. Guia curricular de segurança do paciente da Organização Mundial da Saúde: edição multiprofissional. Rio de Janeiro: Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro; 2016 [acesso em 10 jan. 2021]. Disponível em: https://cdn.who.int/media/docs/default-source/patient-safety/9788555268502-por519565d3-e2ff-4289-b67f-4560fcd33b9d.pdf?sfvrsn=9e58a092_1.]
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/...
)-(2222. Brasil. Documento de referência para o Programa Nacional de Segurança do Paciente/ Ministério da Saúde; Fundação Oswaldo Cruz; Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde; 2014 [acesso em 20 dez 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/ razilian o/documento_referencia_programa_nacional_seguranca.pdf .
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. Their most frequent causes were the omission of important clinical information, verbal prescription, illegible writing in medical records and files and/or the absence of the name, signature and stamp/digital certification of the professional responsible for the care. These problems occurred more frequently during the transition of care between shifts, in transfers between sectors and between health institutions, and in emergency situations. Proven barriers to communication in teamwork include hierarchy, little regard for the opinion of its members, failure to include the person under care and their family members/caregivers as part of the team, and little clarity about the role and functions of the team member, which are corroborated by the instability of the teams and/or transitoriness of its members and the assignment of tasks to new members, without support and prior qualification, among others1818. World Health Organization, World Alliance for Patient Safety. Patients for patient safety: statement of case. Geneva; 2013 [acesso em 10 jan 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patients_for_patient/PFPS_brochure_2013.pdf .
https://www.who.int/patientsafety/patien...
)-(2525. Mickan SM. Evaluating the effectiveness of health care teams. Aust Health Rev. 2005; 29(2):211-7..

As for the qualification for teamwork, a recent systematic review of the resources in the literature on communication for health professionals during the Covid-19 pandemic concluded that most articles and documents were directed at the physicians, and there was a gap related to the resources for non-medical professionals. Topics that required greater consideration, indicated by the authors, included: communication strategies in telehealth, cultural sensitivity, empathy, compassion, loss, grief and moral distress2828. Wittenberg E, Goldsmith JV, Chen C, Prince-Paul M, Johnson RR. Opportunities to improve Covid-19 provider communication resources: a systematic review. Patient Educ Couns . 2021;104(3):438-51. caused by the witnessing of inappropriate attitudes and actions or the need to make decisions that go against one’s own moral values, often due to the scarcity of resources2929. Gustavsson ME, Arnberg FK, Juth N, von Schreeb J. Moral distress among disaster responders: what is it? PDM. 2020;35(2):212-9..

The importance of training health professionals for the 21st century, so they can effectively communicate in collaborative interdisciplinary/interprofessional, intersectoral and transnational teamwork, in health leadership and in local, regional, national and global politics has been highlighted. This competence is necessary so that teams can act in a responsive way to the constant changes in local, national and global health needs, favoring the transformation of reality (transformational education), and to improve “health systems in an interdependent world”, promoting the health of populations, universal equity in health, social justice, global socioeconomic development and human security3030. Frenk J, Chen L, Bhutta ZA, Cohen J, Crisp N, Evan T, et al. Health professionals for a new century: tranforming educatino to strengthen health systems in an interdependent world. Lancet. 2010;376(9756):1923-58.. In this context, human health must be understood as part of a web of interdependent relationships with life in a broader sense, dependent on the consolidation of relationships of solidarity and individual, collective and environmental care3131. Capra F, Eichemberg NR. A teia da vida: uma nova compreensão científica dos sistemas vivos. São Paulo: Cultrix; 2006;, without territorial boundaries. As stated in the National Curriculum Guidelines (DCN, Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais) for the undergraduate medical course, health care must preserve “biodiversity with sustainability”, respecting the relationships between “human beings, the environment, society and technologies”3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014..

Since the 1990s, the model of care centered on relationships has emerged3333. Tresolini CP, The Pew-Fetzer Task Force. Health professions education and relationship-centered care. San Francisco, CA: Pew Health Professions Commission; 2000., recognizing that, in addition to the relationship with the person under care, all the relationships created at each moment and in each space of health care influence each other and that care is interdependent on these relationships. This means that each person involved in this care influences its results, bringing to this encounter their subjectivity, with a personality and life story and their relationships with themselves, their emotions, interpretations, perspectives, needs, expectations and choices, and their own knowledge and values. Thus, the physician must be aware of how they, their emotions and all of their subjectivity, as well as those of other people involved in care, contribute to the care outcomes3333. Tresolini CP, The Pew-Fetzer Task Force. Health professions education and relationship-centered care. San Francisco, CA: Pew Health Professions Commission; 2000.)-(3636. Kreps GL. Relational communication in health care. Southern Speech Communication Journal. 2009;53(4):344-59..

The knowledge built on effective communication processes and components and on the effectiveness of their teaching37 contributed to the development of models to construct the clinical encounter and, among them, the method centered on the person under care3838. Pendleton D, Schofield T, Tate P, Havelock P, Scholfield T. The new consultation: developing doctor-patient communication. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2003., the SEGUE (Set the stage, Elicit information, Give information, Understand the patient’s perspective, and End the encounter) method39, the Calgary-Cambridge guide40,41 and the Four Habits Model4242. Frankel RM, Stein T. Getting the most out of the clinical encounter: the four habits model. Perm J. 1999;3(3):79-88.. Moreover, consensuses were created for the teaching of communication in undergraduate medical courses4343. Simpson M, Buckman R, Stewart M, Maguire P, Lipkin M, Novack D, et al. Doctor-patient communication: the Toronto consensus statement. BMJ. 1991;303(6814):1385-7.)-(5252. Medical Professionalism Project. Medical professionalism in the new millennium: a physicians’ charter. Lancet . 2002;359(9305):520-2.. As professionalism is a construct, whose components are essential to medical practice5252. Medical Professionalism Project. Medical professionalism in the new millennium: a physicians’ charter. Lancet . 2002;359(9305):520-2.)-(5656. Rabow MW, Remen RN, Parmelee DX, Inui TS. Professional formation: extending medicine’s lineage of service into the next century. Acad Med . 2010;85(2):310-7. (as well as to the practice of other professional categories), it is one of the bases of communication in some consensuses, such as in the ones from the United Kingdom4646. Von Fragstein M, Silverman J, Cushing A, Quilligan S, Salisbury H, Wiskin C, et al. UK consensus statement on the content of communication curricula in undergraduate medical education. Med Educ . 2008;42(11):1100-7.),(5151. Noble LM, Scott-Smith W, O’Neill B, Salisbury H. Consensus statement on an updated core communication curriculum for UK undergraduate medical education. Patient Educ Couns . 2018;101(9):1712-9.. The security of the person under care, while part of professionalism, is another basis of communication in the most recent UK consensus5151. Noble LM, Scott-Smith W, O’Neill B, Salisbury H. Consensus statement on an updated core communication curriculum for UK undergraduate medical education. Patient Educ Couns . 2018;101(9):1712-9..

Several books have also been published to support the teaching of medical communication in general and in the clinical encounter. Some of them are mentioned here to provide greater familiarity to those interested in the topic22. Araújo IS, Cardoso JM. Comunicação e saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2007.),(3838. Pendleton D, Schofield T, Tate P, Havelock P, Scholfield T. The new consultation: developing doctor-patient communication. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2003.),(5757. Bloom SW. The doctor and his patient: a sociological interpretation. New York: Russel Sage Foundation; 1963.)-(6262. Dohms M, Gusso G, organizadores. Comunicação clínica: aperfeiçoando os encontros em saúde. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2021., but they are just the “tip of the iceberg” amidst the existing vastness.

The international consensuses for the teaching of communication partially meet the needs of medical training in Brazil, considering that its population exceeds 200 million inhabitants, which has different intra and inter-regional characteristics and needs6363. Abrantes VLC. O IBGE e a formação da nacionalidade: território, memória e identidade em construção. Simpósio Nacional de História, 24, São Leopoldo, RS. Anais eletrônicos. São Leopoldo: Unisinos, 2007 [acesso em 10 abr 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://anpuh.org.br/uploads/anais-simposios/pdf/2019-01/1548210563_70ce6df73e2768b3f47ecdec48e2b97f.pdf .
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, and that its public health system - the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS, Sistema Único de Saúde) - has as principles the universality (egalitarian access to health services for all individuals6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990.),(6565. Paim JS, Silva LMV. Universalidade, integralidade, equidade e SUS. BIS Bol Inst Saúde. 2010;12(2):109-14.), integrality (integral vision of the human being, with comprehensive and effective actions in health6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990.),(6565. Paim JS, Silva LMV. Universalidade, integralidade, equidade e SUS. BIS Bol Inst Saúde. 2010;12(2):109-14.) and equity (respect for the uniqueness and subjectivity of each person, considering their individual and collective characteristics and needs, without any kind of prejudice or privilege, prioritizing vulnerable and at-risk groups or categories, to defend dignified treatment and guarantee social justice6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990.),(6565. Paim JS, Silva LMV. Universalidade, integralidade, equidade e SUS. BIS Bol Inst Saúde. 2010;12(2):109-14.). The SUS also includes the social control guideline, which presupposes the active and daily participation of the population in discussions to direct health services and actions in all of their instances, so that the system meets their needs and interests 6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990.. Embracement, which includes listening to the users of the Unified Health System (SUS) and other Brazilian citizens, is part of the national humanization policy to increase social participation and meet the health needs of the population6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990.),(6666. Brasil. HumanizaSUS: política nacional de humanização: documento base para gestores e trabalhadores do SUS/Ministério da Saúde, Secretaria-Executiva, Núcleo Técnico da Política Nacional de Humanização. 2ª ed. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde ; 2004 [acesso em 20 dez 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/ razilian o/humanizaSUS_politica_nacional_humanizacao.pdf .
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.

The DCNs, introduced in 2001, aimed to align medical education with the learning needs of the students and with the health needs of the population according to the SUS. In the DCNs, communication was one of the six skills to be achieved by medical school graduates6767. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 4, de 7 de novembro de 2001. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina. Diário Oficial da União ; 9 nov 2001.. After the “More Doctors Program” (PMM, Programa Mais Médicos) in 20136868. Brasil. Lei nº 12.871, de 22 de outubro de 2013. Institui o Programa Mais Médicos, altera as Leis nº 8.745, de 9 de dezembro de 1993, e nº 6.932, de 7 de julho de 1981, e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 23 out 2013., the guidelines were revised, resulting in the 2014 version of the DCNs3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014.. The previous focus on six competencies to be achieved changed to competencies in relation to the areas of health care, health management and health education. Communication permeates most processes in these three areas of competence.

Being aware of the importance of training Brazilian physicians to effectively communicate when attending to the Brazilian population, while following the principles of the SUS, ABEM developed a communication project, containing among its objectives the construction of a consensus for its teaching in Brazilian medical courses6969. Grosseman S, Loures L, Mariussi A, Grossman E, Muraguchi E. Projeto ensino de habilidades de comunicação na área da saúde: uma trajetória inicial. Cad Abem. 2014;10:7-12.),(7070. Grosseman S, Lampert JB, Soliani ML, Dohms M, Novack D. Projeto Abem: Ensino de comunicação na área da saúde. Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica; 2020 [acesso em 3 dez 2020]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://website.abem-educmed.org.br/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Hist%C3%B3rico-projeto-HC.pdf .
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. The aim of this manuscript is to present the consensus for the teaching of communication in Brazilian medical schools.

METHOD

The creation of the consensus started in 20146969. Grosseman S, Loures L, Mariussi A, Grossman E, Muraguchi E. Projeto ensino de habilidades de comunicação na área da saúde: uma trajetória inicial. Cad Abem. 2014;10:7-12.. Its construction was carried out in a collective and collaborative manner. According to Innes and Booher7171. Innes JE, Booher DE. Consensus building and complex adaptive systems: a framework for evaluating collaborative planning. JAPA. 1999;65(4):412-23. and Innes7272. Innes JE. Consensus building: clarifications for the critics. Planning Theory. 2004;3(1):5-20., a collaboratively constructed consensus constitutes “a set of practices” in which people representing different interests meet for a long-term dialogue, mediated by a facilitator, to address an issue or concern and arrive at a joint proposal. Its construction process must contain the following criteria: include representatives with different levels of interest; be guided by goals, tasks and practices shared by the group; allow participants to actively interact throughout the process, encouraging creative thinking; incorporate high quality information and evidence; reach an agreement on their meanings; and seek consensus by agreement, after broadly exploring the answers to the differences, through discussions6565. Paim JS, Silva LMV. Universalidade, integralidade, equidade e SUS. BIS Bol Inst Saúde. 2010;12(2):109-14.)-(6666. Brasil. HumanizaSUS: política nacional de humanização: documento base para gestores e trabalhadores do SUS/Ministério da Saúde, Secretaria-Executiva, Núcleo Técnico da Política Nacional de Humanização. 2ª ed. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde ; 2004 [acesso em 20 dez 2021]. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/ razilian o/humanizaSUS_politica_nacional_humanizacao.pdf .
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.

To ensure the participation of as many representatives as possible and their diversity, the discussions took place in person between 2014 and 2018 in six workshops held at the Brazilian Congresses of Medical Education promoted by ABEM, and three specific events on communication. The total number of participants was 276, including communication experts and teachers, students and other professionals interested in the area, from 126 higher education institutions in the medical and health area, four Health Secretariats and one Health foundation. One group met virtually, every two weeks or monthly, after the first in-person workshop.

Each in-person meeting lasted from four to eight hours and its dynamic consisted of sharing experiences in the teaching of communication and bibliographic material brought by experts, in addition to international consensuses, as they were being published4040. Kurtz S, Silverman J, Benson J, Draper J. Marrying content and process in clinical method teaching: enhancing the Calgary-Cambridge guides. Acad Med . 2003;78(8):802-9.)-(5050. Bachmann C, Kiessling C, Härtl A, Haak R. Communication in health professions: a European consensus on inter-and multi-professional learning objectives in German. GMS J Med Educ . 2016;33(2):Doc23. and the presentation of the version under construction of the Brazilian consensus offered by the organizers. New knowledge, skills and attitudes that should be part of the consensus were then discussed in small groups, which were subsequently presented to all the participants, with debates and agreement on the content to remain, confirmed by voting. As several components of professionalism were listed in the construction process, one of the workshops was aimed to discuss which components should be included in the consensus. The decision was unanimous to keep all of them and to consider professionalism as one of the bases of communication. The virtual meetings followed the same dynamics as the in-person meetings but lasted from one and a half to two hours.

The consensus was finalized in 2020 by the virtual group. However, the new communication challenges highlighted throughout the Covid-197373. Yi-chong X. Timeline - Covid-19: events from the first identified case to 15 April. Social Alternatives. 2020;39(2):60-3. pandemic required its review.

The semifinal version of the consensus was presented in July 2021 at a meeting held on ABEM’s virtual platform, with an invitation being sent to its directors and all those who had participated at some point in its construction process, when changes were suggested to be included in its final version, which was unanimously approved. After being submitted to the present journal, one of the opinions demanded new virtual meetings to consider the listed recommendations. The new final version was approved in a virtual meeting with an invitation being sent to all the participants of the consensus at the end of February 2022.

Considering the importance of the material shared by the participants throughout the consensus construction process and also the lack of familiarity that some readers might have in relation to some of the mentioned aspects, unlike other consensuses, this one contains bibliographic references in some of its specific objectives. We would like to clarify that articles and books cited as references were selected according to their relevance, aiming to support educators in the teaching of communication; however, without the intention of exhausting the literature. The explanation of some concepts and terms are also provided in a separate table, to facilitate their understanding by readers who may not know them.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: THE CONSENSUS

The teaching of communication in medical schools should have the overall objective of developing knowledge, skills and attitudes in the medical student, so that, when they graduate from the course, they can demonstrate competence when communicating with the people involved in the academic-scientific environment, in health care and health management.

The people involved include students, faculty, physicians, professionals in the healthcare area and other areas of knowledge, members of the interdisciplinary and interprofessional team, employees, researchers, managers, people under care, their family members, caregivers, guardians, loved ones, interpreters, people who respond for them, families, social groups, the community and its representatives and other people with whom the physician has a relationship in their professional performance.

Communication must be based on relationships, being grounded on professionalism, on the principles of the SUS and on social participation. Medical training must be guided by the DCNs and be based on theoretical references and scientific evidence. The DCNs establish that the medical course must provide a “humanistic, critical, reflective and ethical” training, and that it should develop in the student the

Capacity to act at the different levels of health care, with actions to promote, prevent, recover and rehabilitate health at the individual and collective levels, with social responsibility and commitment to the defense of citizenship, human dignity, the integral health of the human being and having as transversality in its practice, always, the social determination of the health and disease process3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014..

The DCNs also establish that, in health care, the student must be trained to act, considering “always the biological, subjective, ethnic-racial, gender, sexual orientation, socioeconomic, political, environmental, cultural, and ethical dimensions, and other aspects that comprise the spectrum of human diversity that make each person or each social group unique”3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014., which is in line with the principles and guidelines of SUS6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990. and constitutes one of the components of professionalism5252. Medical Professionalism Project. Medical professionalism in the new millennium: a physicians’ charter. Lancet . 2002;359(9305):520-2.)-(5656. Rabow MW, Remen RN, Parmelee DX, Inui TS. Professional formation: extending medicine’s lineage of service into the next century. Acad Med . 2010;85(2):310-7., which includes:

  1. 1. Bioethics and Ethics, which involve
    1. 1.1. Respect for
      1. 1.1.1. human dignity and freedom of individual and social choice, considering the uniqueness of each person or social group, in the cultural, ethnic-racial, spiritual, socioeconomic and environmental plurality, as well as of gender and sexual orientation and choices, values, beliefs, perspectives and preferences;

      2. 1.1.2. the privacy and modesty of the person under care;

      3. 1.1.3. the autonomy of the person under care and responsibility for its promotion;

    2. 1.2. Subordination of self-interest in favor of the interests of people under one’s care and of their family members / caregivers;

    3. 1.3. Recognition of professional limitations,

    4. 1.4. Secrecy and confidentiality;

    5. 1.5. Responsibility for the safety and comfort of the person under care.

  2. 2. Honesty, probity and integrity;

  3. 3. Demonstration of humanistic values, such as altruism, empathy, compassion, solidarity, sensitivity, understanding, interest and affection;

  4. 4. Accountability in fulfilling the professional contract, with responsibility, responsiveness, reliability in actions and legal subordination to obligations;

  5. 5. Social responsibility, being committed to the defense of citizenship, human dignity, and the integral health of the human being;

  6. 6. Commitment to excellence, academic and professional merit, as well as lifelong learning;

  7. 7. Effective communication:
    1. 7.1. intrapersonal: self-awareness (presence, recognition and management of one’s own emotions and self-care), reflective practice, critical thinking and adaptability (acknowledgement of limitations and seeking help, acceptance and provision of constructive feedback, resilience, flexibility to transform knowledge and one’s own practice and dealing with high levels of complexity and uncertainty);

    2. 7.2. interpersonal (detailed in the consensus).

In the medical course curriculum, communication must be included from the beginning of the course and continue until its end. The contents must have increasing complexity and be appropriately integrated with other contents, having the “Human and Social Sciences as a transversal axis” and the inclusion of “transversal topics [...] that involve [...] “human rights” and [...] public policies, programs, strategic actions and current national and international guidelines for education and health”3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014..

The interaction “of the student with health users and professionals” must occur throughout the course and interprofessional learning and interdisciplinarity must be provided, integrating the “biological, psychological, ethnic-racial, socioeconomic, cultural, environmental and educational dimensions” in the different scenarios of teaching, extension and research, which are inseparable3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014..

The pedagogical approach must contain varied and interactive strategies that encourage student participation in the construction of their knowledge, associate theory with practice, stimulate curiosity, creativity, reflective practice, critical thinking and sensitivity, including, whenever possible, the humanities3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014.),(5959. Kurtz S, Silverman J, Draper J. Teaching and learning communication skills in medicine. 2nd ed. Oxford: Radcliffe; 2005.)-(6262. Dohms M, Gusso G, organizadores. Comunicação clínica: aperfeiçoando os encontros em saúde. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2021..

Practices should aim to incorporate knowledge, skills and attitudes (KSAs) with increasing complexity and have appreciation feedback for their improvement. The practical learning environment should be more controlled initially, such as, for instance, with role-playing or simulation in a communication laboratory, and progress to a less controlled environment, such as real-life scenarios, under supervision5959. Kurtz S, Silverman J, Draper J. Teaching and learning communication skills in medicine. 2nd ed. Oxford: Radcliffe; 2005.)-(6262. Dohms M, Gusso G, organizadores. Comunicação clínica: aperfeiçoando os encontros em saúde. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2021..

The assessment should be predominantly formative, without disregarding summative assessments5959. Kurtz S, Silverman J, Draper J. Teaching and learning communication skills in medicine. 2nd ed. Oxford: Radcliffe; 2005.)-(6262. Dohms M, Gusso G, organizadores. Comunicação clínica: aperfeiçoando os encontros em saúde. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2021..

The educational environment must be a safe one and cultivate ethics, sensitivity, empathy, solidarity, affection7474. Brasil. Portaria no 2.761, de 19 de novembro de 2013. Institui a Política Nacional de Educação Popular em Saúde no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde - PNEP-SUS. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 nov 2013 [acesso em 20 dez 2021]. Disponivel em: Disponivel em: https://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2013/prt2761_19_11_2013.html .
https://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegi...
and non-violent7575. Rosenberg MB. Comunicação não violenta: técnicas para aprimorar relacionamentos pessoais e profissionais. 3ª ed. São Paulo: Ágora; 2006., inclusive and non-prejudiced communication, which makes medical training a model “from” and “for” the care that enhance the medical student’s ability to establish respectful and constructive relationships in their process of learning and caring for themselves and others.

For this purpose, the institution must include the daily embracement of the student and the educator, listening to them and valuing their emotions, and it must contain structures for their psychological and pedagogical support. The problematization and critical reflection7676. Freire P, Faundez A. Por uma pedagogia da pergunta. São Paulo: Paz e Terra ; 2011. of the socialization process must be carried out in a systematic and planned manner, for the development of the medical professional identity construction and the best use of the teaching-learning process, aiming at attaining the objectives of the undergraduate medical course, which is to train competent, ethical, critical, solidary physicians, with social responsibility and committed to the defense of human dignity and social justice3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014..

The hidden curriculum, characterized by witnessed attitudes and shared messages that are negative, ambiguous and not consistent with the objectives pursued by the course7777. Gunio MJ. Determining the influences of a hidden curriculum on students’ character development using the Illuminative Evaluation Model. JCSR. 2021;3(2):194-206., must be the object of regular problematization and reflection in the formal curriculum. Based on praxis (reflection on practice), strategies must be developed to build a non-oppressive environment that encourages healthy relationships7878. Freire P. Pedagogia da esperança: um reencontro com a pedagogia do oprimido. São Paulo: Paz e Terra ; 2014..

According to Bakhtin, we build ourselves in the interaction with other people7979. Bakhtin M. Estética da criação verbal. 2ª ed. São Paulo: Martins Fontes; 1997., being the word the most pure and sensible form of the social relation and the communication the dynamic process for building social meanings. Language carries an ideology and a practice, and each “speech, statement or text expresses a multiplicity of voices, most of them without the speaker being aware of it”22. Araújo IS, Cardoso JM. Comunicação e saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2007.),(7979. Bakhtin M. Estética da criação verbal. 2ª ed. São Paulo: Martins Fontes; 1997.),(8080. Bakhtin M. Marxismo e Filosoia da linguagem: problemas fundamentais do método sociológico na ciência da linguagem. 16ª ed. São Paulo: Hucitec; 2014., which represent different interests and positions in the social structure. As what people “are or will become depends on a continuum of ruptures and transformations that occur as we interact with others”22. Araújo IS, Cardoso JM. Comunicação e saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2007.),(7979. Bakhtin M. Estética da criação verbal. 2ª ed. São Paulo: Martins Fontes; 1997., disrespectful messages run the risk of being legitimized and incorporated by the student of medicine, especially when they are shared in a subtle manner8181. Venosa B, Bastos LC. Goffman e a ritualização do infinitamente pequeno: observando o sutil na sustentação do discurso hegemônico em interações de um curso de marcenaria para mulheres. Veredas - Revista de Estudos Linguísticos. 2021;25(1):140-63., with derogatory gestures, jokes, images or comments. These strategies allow their disrespectful and unethical content to go unnoticed.

It is crucial that students and educators understand the ideologies that underlie the discourses about “the other”, and that the hegemonic discourse in a given society is historically constructed through struggles, being socially shared in its different institutions (e.g., family and religious and educational institutions, which includes the medical school). It contains arbitrary criteria of classification, stratification and normativity regarding superiority/inferiority and inclusion/exclusion, which serve specific interests of power, privileges and/or prestige8282. Berger PL. Perspectivas sociológicas: uma visão humanística. Petrópolis: Vozes; 2007.),(8383. Berger PL., Luckmann T. A construção social da realidade: tratado de sociologia do conhecimento. Petrópolis: Vozes ; 2007.. The non-perception of this arbitrariness is what makes them legitimate and perpetuated as common sense, generating multiple prejudiced interpretations such as classism, racism, sexism, machismo, capacitism, LGBTQIA+phobia and xenophobia8282. Berger PL. Perspectivas sociológicas: uma visão humanística. Petrópolis: Vozes; 2007.)-(8484. Bourdieu P. O poder simbólico. Rio de Janeiro: Bertrand Brasil; 2000., and other authoritarian and oppressive attitudes, of discrimination and intolerance. Based on the reflection, it is expected that people involved in the academic environment will increase their awareness of the values of professionalism to be cultivated.

To ensure the implementation and quality of communication teaching in medical schools, it is essential to encourage and support faculty development for the teaching of communication in institutional programs or in existing programs outside the institutions.

According to the DCNs, in its single paragraph of chapter II:

[…] competence is understood as the ability to mobilize knowledges, skills and attitudes, using the available resources, and expressing itself as initiatives and actions that will translate into performances capable of solving, with relevance, opportunity and success, the challenges that arise in professional practice, in different contexts of health work, translated into the excellence of medical practice, primarily in the scenarios of the Unified Health System (SUS).

Therefore, we describe the KSAs to be developed throughout the course, described as specific objectives in Table 1. In it, the excerpts written between quotation marks are citations from the DCNs3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014.. For certain specific purposes, relevant references are cited, which can help educators in the teaching of communication and physicians in their practice. For example, the “World Health Organization Patient Safety Curriculum Guide”1919. World Health Organization. WHO patient safety curriculum guide: multi-professional edition. Geneva: WHO. 2011. Disponível em: Disponível em: https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241501958 . Acesso 10 jan. 2021. [Marra VN, Sette ML, coordenadores. Guia curricular de segurança do paciente da Organização Mundial da Saúde: edição multiprofissional. Rio de Janeiro: Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro; 2016 [acesso em 10 jan. 2021]. Disponível em: https://cdn.who.int/media/docs/default-source/patient-safety/9788555268502-por519565d3-e2ff-4289-b67f-4560fcd33b9d.pdf?sfvrsn=9e58a092_1.]
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/...
, quoted several times, addresses: characteristics of effective communication; cultural competence; teamwork communication; safety of the person under care; conflict management; error management and disclosure; management of uncertainties; and, communicating difficult news, among other topics; and contains roadmaps for the safety of the person under care in procedures, emergencies, changes in work shifts, transfer between sectors and between institutions and for other communication topics, as well as documents, including informed consent and the form for the reporting of adverse events and errors.

Table 1
Specific communication objectives to be developed throughout the medical course in Brazilian medical schools

We emphasize again, however, that the cited references are just a few among the vastness of the existing literature on communication.

Table 2 provides some concepts and explanations of terms covered in this manuscript, to facilitate the readers' understanding.

Table 2
Explanations and details of some terms used in the manuscript

Figure 1 illustrates the different stages and processes of the relationship-centered encounter.

Figure 1
Communication centered on relationships in the different stages and processes of the clinical encountera

Figure 2 illustrates specific contexts in which the medical student must acquire the ability to communicate in health care, represented by a tree. Its trunk represents communication centered on relationships, its base represents its support by professionalism5252. Medical Professionalism Project. Medical professionalism in the new millennium: a physicians’ charter. Lancet . 2002;359(9305):520-2.)-(5656. Rabow MW, Remen RN, Parmelee DX, Inui TS. Professional formation: extending medicine’s lineage of service into the next century. Acad Med . 2010;85(2):310-7., the SUS6464. Brasil. Lei nº 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990. Dispõe sobre as condições para a promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde, a organização e o funcionamento dos serviços correspondentes e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União ; 20 set 1990., the DCNs3232. Brasil. Resolução CNE/CES nº 3, de 20 de junho de 2014. Institui Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Medicina e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União; 2014. and theoretical references and scientific evidence, by which it must be guided or on which it must be grounded, and its canopy cover contains the contexts for the teaching of communication in health care.

Figure 2
Health care contexts in which the medical student must acquire the ability to communicate

FINAL CONSIDERATIONS

This is the first consensus for the teaching of communication in Brazilian medical schools. We emphasize, however, that it represents an initial step and that, due to its collective and collaborative construction with representatives from more than half of the medical schools and other areas of health and representatives of health institutions, the consensus must be seen as a process of ongoing construction, which may require additions in the future.

It is assumed that communication should be centered on relationships, based on professionalism, universality, integrality and equity in health care for the population and encourage social participation, and based on the DCNs, theoretical references and scientific evidence. Specific objectives are described to develop competence in communication in the medical graduate, covering the theoretical foundations, the search, critical evaluation of the literature, preparation and writing of documents, and intrapersonal and interpersonal communication to make the medical graduate competent in communicating with people involved in the academic-scientific environment and in health care and health management. It is recommended the inclusion of communication in the curriculum from the beginning to the end of the course, integrated with other contents and areas of knowledge.

The moments in which each objective must be developed in the course were not established, considering the peculiarities of the curriculum of each school and their autonomy in its planning.

We hope the consensus will contribute to the review of curricula of undergraduate courses in medicine that already contain communication or to its implementation, and, perhaps, in the curricula of medical residencies in Brazil, to promote communication in medical education, in the attention to individual and collective health and in health management, to strengthen the SUS and achieve social transformations that improve the population’s health conditions and the defense of social justice.

The next objective of this ABEM project is to offer teaching materials and workshops to support teacher development in the teaching of communication.

Finally, we clarify that, just like any collective construction process, this consensus can be updated when necessary.

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  • 6
    Evaluated by double blind review process.
  • SOURCES OF FUNDING

    The authors declare no sources of funding for this study.

LIST OF ALL CONSENSUS’ PARTICIPANTS WHO AGREED TO THE DISCLOSURE OF THEIR NAMES AND INSTITUTIONS

Suely Grosseman (ABEM project coordinator)

Facilitators: Newton Key Hokama (coordinator of the virtual communication group WebComunica Brasil) and Evelin Massae Ogatta Muraguchi (reporting of the consensus workshops)

CEOs of the ABEM administrations that supported the project: Jadete Barbosa Lampert, Sigisfredo Luis Brenelli and Nildo Alves Batista

Ádala Nayana de Sousa Mata - Escola Multicampi de Ciências Médicas do Rio Grande do Norte /Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte

Agnes de Fátima Pereira Cruvinel - Universidade Federal da Fronteira Sul

Alessandra Vitorino Naghettini - Universidade Federal de Goiás

Alice Mendes Duarte - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte

Alicia Navarro de Souza - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

Ana Cristina Franzoi - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

Ana Paula Mariussi - Universidade da Região de Joinville

Cacilda Andrade de Sá - Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

Cáthia Costa Carvalho Rabelo - Faculdade de Ciências Médicas de Minas Gerais e Santa Casa de Minas Gerais

Cecilia Emília De Oliveira Creste - Universidade do Oeste Paulista

Danielle Bivanco-Lima - Faculdade de Ciências Médicas da Santa Casa de São Paulo

David Araujo Júnior - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia

Denise Herdy Afonso - Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro

Dolores Gonzales Borges de Araújo - Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública

Elaine Fernanda Dornelas de Souza - Universidade do Oeste Paulista

Eleusa Gallo Rosenburg - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia

Eliane Perlatto Moura - Universidade João do Rosário Vellano

Eloisa Grosseman - Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

Erotildes Maria Leal - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

Evelin Massae Ogatta Muraguchi - Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná, Campus Londrina

Fernanda Patrícia Soares Souto Novaes - Universidade Federal do Vale do São Francisco

Guilherme Antonio Moreira de Barros - Universidade Estadual Paulista

Gustavo Antonio Raimondi - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia

Helena Borges Martins da Silva Paro - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia

Hermila Tavares Vilar Guedes - Universidade do Estado da Bahia

Iago Amado Peres Gualda - Universidade Estadual de Maringá

Ilza Martha de Souza - Universidade do Oeste Paulista

Irani Ferreira da Silva Gerab - Universidade Federal de São Paulo

Ivana Lucia Damásio Moutinho - Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

João Carlos da Silva Bizario - Faculdade de Medicina de Olinda

José Maria Peixoto - Universidade João do Rosário Vellano

Josemar de Almeida Moura - Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

Juliana Guerra - Faculdade Pernambucana de Saúde

Lara de Araújo Torreão - Universidade Federal da Bahia

Lara Cristina Leite Guimarães Machado - Universidade da Região de Joinville

Laura Bechara Secchin - Faculdade de Ciências Médicas e da Saúde de Juiz de Fora

Leandro Francisco Moraes Loures - Universidade da Região de Joinville

Liliane Pereira Braga - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte

Luiza De Oliveira Kruschewsky Ribeiro - Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública

Marcela Dohms - Vice-presidente da Associação Brasileira Balint

Márcia Helena Fávero de Souza - Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

Maria Amélia Dias Pereira - Universidade Federal de Goiás

Maria de Fátima Aveiro Colares - Centro Universitário Municipal de Franca

Maria Eugenia V. Franco - Universidade Federal do Mato Grosso

Maria Luísa Soliani - Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública

Maria Viviane Lisboa de Vasconcelos - Universidade Federal de Alagoas

Mariana Maciel Nepomuceno - Universidade Federal de Pernambuco

Marianne Regina Araújo Sabino - Faculdade de Ciências Médicas de Pernambuco

Marta Silva Menezes - Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública

Mauricio Abreu Pinto Peixoto - Instituto Nutes da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

Milene Soares Agreli - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia

Miriam May Philippi - Centro Universitário de Brasília

Mônica da Cunha Oliveira - Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública

Mônica Daltro - Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública

Newton Key Hokama - Universidade do Estado de São Paulo, Botucatu

Nilva Galli - Universidade do Oeste Paulista

Paulo Pinho - Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

Paulo Roberto Cardoso Consoni - Universidade Luterana do Brasil

Priscila Maria Alvares Usevicius - Universidade Evangélica de Goiás

Renata Rodrigues Catani - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia

Rosana Alves- Faculdades Pequeno Príncipe

Rosuita Fratari Bonito - Faculdade do Trabalho de Uberlândia

Sandra Torres Serra - Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro

Simone Appenzeller - Universidade Estadual de Campinas

Simone da Nóbrega Tomaz Moreira - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte

Solange de Azevedo Mello Coutinho - Escola de Medicina Souza Marques

Suely Grosseman - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina e Faculdades Pequeno Príncipe

Ubirajara João Picanço de Miranda Junior - Escola Superior de Ciências da Saúde

Valéria Goes - Universidade Federal do Ceará

Chief Editor: Rosiane Viana Zuza Diniz. Associate editor: Daniela Chiesa.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    28 Oct 2022
  • Date of issue
    2022

History

  • Received
    09 Oct 2021
  • Accepted
    15 June 2022
Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica SCN - QD 02 - BL D - Torre A - Salas 1021 e 1023 , Asa Norte | CEP: 70712-903, Brasília | DF | Brasil, Tel.: (55 61) 3024-9978 / 3024-8013 - Brasília - DF - Brazil
E-mail: rbem.abem@gmail.com