Advancing Psychiatric Education: Leveraging Simulated Patients and Actors at the University of Pécs “Shame dies when stories are told in safe places”
J. D. Fekete, M. Simon, V. Voros, T. Tényi, A. Hambuch, A. Nagy

TL;DR
This paper explores how using simulated patients and actors in psychiatric education helps medical students learn through realistic, safe interactions.
Contribution
The study evaluates and refines the use of simulated patients for psychiatric education at the University of Pécs, laying groundwork for future implementation.
Findings
Students initially felt anxious but later recognized the value of simulated patient interactions.
Feedback from simulated patients confirmed students' pre-existing skills and highlighted emotional learning.
The method supports skill development in empathetic communication and therapeutic relationships.
Abstract
The integration of simulated patients and actors (SPs) into psychiatric education has long been recognized as a transformative pedagogical approach, yielding substantial benefits to healthcare students and professionals. The aim of this investigation was to evaluate the SP methodology and to refine it for future implementation in psychiatric education at the University of Pécs, Hungary. To investigate the feasibility and utility of incorporating SPs into psychiatric education, we conducted a preliminary study involving participants from the German Program in the University of Pécs, Hungary. This group consisted of 16 medical students in their 5th year of study. The study design involved participants forming groups of three, engaging in psychiatric interview with SPs. After the interview, SPs provided feedback from patient’s perspective, articulating their emotional responses. These…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIdentity, Memory, and Therapy · Advances in Oncology and Radiotherapy · Psychiatric care and mental health services
