; Reed, George W.; and Clay, Marjorie, "Detecting attitudinal changes about death and dying as a result of end-of-life care curricula for medical undergraduates" (2005 Design: A case control design (n ؍ 100) and a one group pretest-posttest design (n ؍ 98) were used to ask: (1) Are these two attitudinal measures responsive to changes induced by two undergraduate EOL curricula? (2) Do these two curricula have an additive effect (i.e., taking both yields a stronger attitudinal change than taking only one)? (3) Are there attitudinal and sociodemographic differences between students who took the year-long elective EOL course and those who did not?Subjects: Undergraduate medical students.
Measurements: Two self-report measures: Concept of a Good Death and Concerns about Dying.Results: Compared to nonelective participants, Elective participants reported less concern about working with dying patients at the end of the course and increased their valuation of clinical criteria in thinking about a "good death." There were trends suggesting decreased general concern about dying and increased valuation of closure, and an interaction suggesting a larger impact on those with higher precourse concern scores. There were no differences between elective and nonelective participants at baseline. The Interclerkship increased students' valuation of personal control aspects of death, and there was a trend in reducing con-