Physician Assistant Studies students practice using design thinkin techniques, at their annual workshop, to have better end of life conversations with patients.
The Physician Assistant Studies Program and the Anatomical Gift Program partnered with the Center for Design Thinking on Aug. 25 and 26 to host the program 鈥淐rucial Conversations in Healthcare.”聽This year, the workshops were聽held in a聽virtual聽format.
黑料不打烊 Physician Assistant Studies students and community volunteers used design thinking practices to help better prepare for the crucial end-of-life conversations they will have as health care practitioners and patients, fostering humility, empathy, compassion and respect.

Students聽engaged聽community volunteers聽from The Village at Brookwood and Twin Lakes Community.
Dianne Person, director of the Anatomical Gift Program in the School of Health Sciences,聽had the initial vision for聽the workshop聽in聽2019. She聽partnered with聽Tracey Thurnes, associate professor of physician assistant studies聽and Danielle Lake, the Director of Design Thinking, to聽create a space for聽physician assistant students聽to聽build聽essential communication聽skills聽needed for their聽professional聽careers.
The Crucial Conversations program is designed to be a mutually beneficial partnership.
鈥淚t gives聽us all聽skills on how to approach a patient’s family, how to tell their story and have it be heard by family members and physicians,”聽Person said.
鈥淲e talk a lot in health care about how we don鈥檛 do this well. We don鈥檛 have crucial conversations enough, and we shy away from them because they can be challenging,鈥 Thurnes said. 鈥淒oing events like this and using the design thinking process makes it more聽authentic聽and聽provides聽us聽with聽ways聽to聽approach聽crucial聽conversations with聽more聽empathy and innovation,聽allowing us to聽focus on the important human elements of having these conversations.鈥
Antoinette Polito, associate professor of physician assistant studies, joined the team聽this year聽and聽helped facilitate the move to a virtual format聽while leading a meaningful student debrief following their conversations.聽鈥淭his is a hard thing to teach. It鈥檚 one of those things that until you do it, it is hard to imagine these hard conversations,鈥 Polito said.
Before the workshop, students used an experience map, a design thinking tool, to create a plan of action before their conversations. The experience maps included the students鈥 goals, actions they planned to talk in the conversation, points they wanted to talk about with the volunteers, and thoughts they had before the discussions. Student Audrey De Los Reyes shared with her volunteer that 鈥渁s a future PA and as a daughter, I will now be more open to having these conversations with my patients and my family members in a more open and empathetic way.鈥
Following a keynote聽titled聽鈥淲e All Have a Story鈥澛爁rom聽Risa聽Hanau, a licensed clinical social worker and director of education at聽AuthoraCare,聽the聽students were put into groups of three and placed into breakout rooms over Zoom with the volunteers. There, the volunteers shared their experiences of having these difficult conversations with family members and healthcare professionals.
Person said聽the design thinking techniques, introduced by Danielle Lake, director of the Center for Design Thinking, aided the students by giving them new tools to have a dialogue with the community volunteers.
鈥淚n this case, she introduced a better understanding for what the problem is by聽listening more fully to others and observing the situation more thoroughly,鈥 Person聽said. 鈥淒esigning a different approach intended to address the problem and testing that new approach with others so that聽conversations can improve over time. The goal is to develop mindsets that support more thoughtful and empathetic conversations between healthcare practitioners and their patients as well as between family members.鈥
Person plans to hold the workshop annually.