TY - JOUR T1 - A pilot study of user acceptance and educational potentials of virtual patients in transcultural psychiatry AU - Pantziaras, I. AU - Courteille, O. AU - Mollica, R. AU - Fors, U. AU - Ekblad, S. KW - transcultural psychiatry KW - virtual patients KW - clinical encounters PY - 2012/07/21 Y1 - 2012/07/16 VL - 3 N1 - doi: 10.5116/ijme.5004.7c78 DO - 10.5116/ijme.5004.7c78 M3 - doi: 10.5116/ijme.5004.7c78 JO - Int J Med Educ SP - 132 EP - 140 PB - IJME SN - 2042-6372 UR - http://www.ijme.net/archive/3/virtual-patients-in-transcultural-psychiatry/ L1 - http://www.ijme.net/archive/3/virtual-patients-in-transcultural-psychiatry.pdf N2 - Objectives: The purpose of this pilot study was to evaluate user acceptance, educational potentials and face and construct validity of a dedicated Virtual Patient system for refugee trauma cases, designed to enhance clinical, interpersonal, social and cultural competence. Methods: We developed a Virtual Patient system portraying a female refugee - mediated by a still image and pre-recorded voice - that was evaluated by an invited group of physicians (n=9) working as residents in Psychiatry (n=8) and General Medicine (n=1). The participants were invited to provide insights/feedback about the system's usefulness and its educational value. Results: Scores across our sample were high regarding the Virtual Patient system's realistic nature (median value: 5 on a 7-point scale) as well as the Virtual Patient's ability to mirror the course of a real clinical investigation (median value: 6 on a 7-point scale). The system was said to provide a good environment for safe training of clinical and communicative skills. The system's face and construct validity were also demonstrated. Proposed future improvements will include the implementation of detailed feedback from a Virtual Advisor and/or the Virtual Patient him/herself, the use of video-simulated patients and the ability to formulate clinical questions in free text. Conclusions: This dedicated Virtual Patient system was well received by the participants. They appraised it as having a good potential for training in relationship to the clinical encounter and the management of traumatized refugees. ER -