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1.
Front Med (Lausanne) ; 11: 1382903, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38808142

RESUMO

Introduction: Teaching professionalism is a fundamental aspect of medical undergraduate education, delivering important domains of professional attitudes, ethics, and behaviors. The effects of educational interventions can be assessed by measuring the change in such domains, but validated assessment tools for these professionalism domains are lacking. In this study, we constructed and conducted expert validation of a modified theory of planned behavior (TPB) questionnaire to assess changes in professional behaviors (PBs) in medical students. Methods: To validate that, we modified an existing TPB questionnaire, and an 18-item questionnaire was subjected to expert panel evaluation using the content validation method. The clarity and relevance of items were assessed using a four-point rating scale (i.e., 1 = not relevant to 4 = highly relevant). Ratings of experts and free-text comments were analyzed. Quantitative evaluation of relevance and clarity was undertaken through analyses of the Item-level Content Validity Index (I-CVI) and Scale-level Content Validity Index (S-CVI). A qualitative assessment of the comments of experts was conducted to refine items, any disagreements were discussed, and a consensus decision was developed among authors for item changes. Results: Quantitative evaluation of the Item-level Content Validity Index (I-CVI) scored 0.9-1 for relevance and 0.7-1 for clarity. Qualitative evaluation resulted in (i) changes to the wording of items (e.g., choices such as "worthless/worthwhile" were replaced with "not important/important"); and (ii) suggestion of the addition of social media in the construct of subjective norms. Discussion: The proposed tool exhibits content validity and can assess TPB constructs in professionalism education. This study of content validity may help to ensure the modified TPB questionnaire accurately measures the TPB constructs, ensuring its effectiveness in accurately measuring the TPB constructs for PB in diversified educational medical institutions.

2.
Perspect Med Educ ; 13(1): 182-191, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38496364

RESUMO

Introduction: School-level student support programmes provide students with pastoral care and support for academic, wellbeing and other issues often via a personal tutor (PT). PT work is a balancing act between respecting the confidential information divulged by students and doing what is expected in terms of accountability and duty of care. We aimed to explore how tutors manage this tension, with the aim of advancing understanding of student support programmes. Methods: This qualitative study was informed by an Institutional Ethnography approach. We conducted 11 semi-structured interviews with PTs from one medical school in Singapore. We considered how they worked in relation to relevant national and institutional-level policy documents and reporting guidelines. Data collection and analysis were iterative. Results: We crafted two composite accounts to illustrate the dilemmas faced by PTs. The first depicts a PT who supports student confidentiality in the same way as doctor-patient confidentiality. The second account is a PT who adopted a more mentoring approach. Both tutors faced confidentiality challenges, using different strategies to "work around" and balance tensions between accountability and maintaining trust. PTs were torn between school and student expectations. Discussion: Fostering trust in the tutor-student relationship is a priority for tutors but tensions between confidentiality, accountability and governance sometimes make it difficult for tutors to reconcile with doing what they think is best for the student. A more nuanced understanding of the concept of confidentiality may help support PTs and ultimately students.


Assuntos
Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Antropologia Cultural , Mentores , Confidencialidade
3.
BJGP Open ; 2024 Apr 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38097267

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Clinical practice occurs in the context of uncertainty. Primary care is a clinical environment that accepts and works with uncertainty differently from secondary care. Recent literature reviews have contributed to understanding how clinical uncertainty is taught in educational settings and navigated in secondary care, and, to a lesser extent, by experienced GPs. We do not know how medical students and doctors in training learn to navigate uncertainty in primary care. AIM: To explore what is known about primary care as an opportunity for learning to navigate uncertainty. DESIGN & SETTING: Scoping review of articles written in English. METHOD: Using a scoping review methodology, Embase, MEDLINE, and Web of Science databases were searched, with additional articles obtained through citation searching. Studies were included in this review if they: (a) were based within populations of medical students and/or doctors in training; and (b) considered clinical uncertainty or ambiguity in primary care or a simulated primary care setting. Study findings were analysed thematically. RESULTS: Thirty-six studies were included from which the following three major themes were developed: uncertainty contributes to professional identity formation (PIF); adaptive responses; and maladaptive behaviours. Relational and social factors that influence PIF were identified. Adaptive responses included adjusting epistemic expectations and shared decision making (SDM). CONCLUSION: Educators can play a key role in helping learners navigate uncertainty through socialisation, discussing primary care epistemology, recognising maladaptive behaviours, and fostering a culture of constructive responses to uncertainty.

4.
Educ Prim Care ; 34(4): 180-183, 2023 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37642400

RESUMO

Uncertainty is inherent in all areas of medical practice, not least in primary care, which is defined by its acceptance of uncertainty and complexity. Single best answer (SBA) questions are a ubiquitous assessment tool in undergraduate medical assessments; however clinical practice, particularly in primary care, challenges the supposition that a single best answer exists for all clinical encounters and dilemmas. In this article, we seek to highlight several aspects of the relationship between this assessment format and clinical uncertainty by considering its influence on medical students' views of uncertainty in the contexts of their medical education, personal epistemology, and clinical expectations.


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Educação Médica , Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Incerteza , Tomada de Decisão Clínica , Avaliação Educacional
5.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 28(5): 1593-1613, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37204520

RESUMO

New public management ideals and standards have become increasingly adhered to in health professions education; this is particularly apparent in high-stakes assessment, as a gateway to practice. Using an Institutional Ethnographic approach, we looked at the work involved in running high-stakes Objective Structured Clinical Exams (OSCEs) throughout an academic year including use of observations, interviews and textual analysis. In our results, we describe three types of 'work'-standardising work, defensibility work and accountability work-summarising these in the discussion as an Accountability Circuit, which shows the organising role of texts on people's work processes. We show how this form of governance mandates a shift towards accountability-centred practices, away from practices which are person-centred; this lens on accountability-centring during high-stakes assessments invites critique of the often-unquestioned emphasis of new public management in health professions education.


Assuntos
Pacientes , Responsabilidade Social , Humanos
7.
Educ Prim Care ; 34(3): 131-137, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36890678

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Clinical placements for medical students in the United Kingdom (UK) came to an abrupt halt in March 2020. The rapidly evolving Covid19 pandemic created specific challenges for educators, balancing safety concerns for patients, students and healthcare staff alongside the imperative to continue to train future clinicians. Organisations such as the Medical Schools Council (MSC) published guidance to help plan return of students to clinical placements. This study aimed to examine how GP education leads made decisions around students returning to clinical placements for the 20/21 academic year. METHOD: Data collection and analysis was informed by an Institutional Ethnographic approach. Five GP education leads from medical schools throughout the UK were interviewed (over MS TEAMS™). Interviews focused on the work the participants did to plan students' return to clinical placements and how they used texts to inform this work. Analysis focused on the interplay between the interview and textual data. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: GP education leads actively used MSC guidance which confirmed students to be 'essential workers', an unquestioned and unquestionable phrase at the time. This permitted students to return to clinical placements by affording the GP education leads authority to ask or persuade GP tutors to accept them. Furthermore, by describing teaching as 'essential work' in its own right in the guidance, this extended what the GP tutors came to expect to do as 'essential workers' themselves. CONCLUSION: GP education leads activated authoritarian phrases such as 'essential workers' and 'essential work' contained within MSC guidance to direct students' return to clinical placements in GP settings.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Pandemias , Reino Unido , Grupos Focais , Atenção à Saúde , Educação de Graduação em Medicina/métodos
8.
Clin Teach ; 20(2): e13563, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36808878

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The Medical Student Technician (MST) role is a paid position established in Northern Ireland in 2020. The Experience-Based Learning (ExBL) model is a contemporary medical education pedagogy advocating supported participation to develop capabilities important for doctors-to-be. In this study, we used the ExBL model to explore the experiences of MSTs and how the role contributed to students' professional development and preparedness for practice. METHODS: A convenience sampling strategy was used to recruit a total of 17 MSTs in three focus groups. Semi-structured interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using the ExBL model as a framework. Transcripts were independently analysed and coded by two investigators and discrepancies resolved with the remaining investigators. RESULTS: The MST experiences reflected the various components of the ExBL model. Students valued earning a salary; however, what students earned transcended the financial reward alone. This professional role enabled students to meaningfully contribute to patient care and have authentic interactions with patients and staff. This fostered a sense of feeling valued and increased self-efficacy amongst MSTs, helping them acquire various practical, intellectual and affective capabilities and subsequently demonstrate an increased confidence in their identities as future doctors. CONCLUSION: Paid clinical roles for medical students could present useful adjuncts to traditional clinical placements, benefiting both students and potentially healthcare systems. The practice-based learning experiences described appear to be underpinned by a novel social context where students can add value, be and feel valued and gain valuable capabilities that better prepare them for starting work as a doctor.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Aprendizagem Baseada em Problemas , Salários e Benefícios , Atenção à Saúde
9.
Adv Simul (Lond) ; 7(1): 27, 2022 Sep 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36064452

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: #MeToo prompted a shift in acceptable societal norms, sparking global recognition of the complexities of entering another's personal space. Physical examinations are an integral part of medicine yet have the capacity to encroach upon patient's personal space, whether in simulated or clinical environments. Examinations may be misconstrued as inappropriate advances, with negative effects for both patient and doctor. Medical educators must consider how they teach students to approach this complex task. This study aimed to gain insight into the lived experiences of medical students when working within patient's personal space. This builds on previous research from the perspective of simulated participants. METHOD: A hermeneutic phenomenology approach was used to explore lived experiences of working within patient's personal space. Data was collected from seven medical students through semi-structured interviews and thematically analysed using template analysis. RESULTS: The analysis yielded four main themes: (1) transitioning into a privileged position; (2) negative role modelling: emphasising the physical; (3) consent: a dynamic and fragile state; and (4) a simple act or a complex performance? DISCUSSION: This study provides a unique insight into the lived experiences of medical students when working within a patient's personal space. The physical examination is a complex process; the experiences of medical students can shape learning on crossing boundaries. Medical educators need to reflect this complexity in teaching, mirroring societal interest around the boundaries of consent. Students need a pedagogical space to develop these interpersonal skills, to prevent early adoption of the clinical gaze, and to create more consciously engaged doctors for the future.

10.
Adv Simul (Lond) ; 7(1): 16, 2022 Jun 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35668473

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In this "Advancing simulation practice" article, we offer an expose of the involvement of real patients in Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs), inviting educators who traditionally involve solely SPs in their summative OSCEs to consider the practice. The need for standardisation in summative assessments can make educators understandably wary to try this, even if the rhetoric to involve real patients is accepted. We offer this as an instance of the tussle between standardisation and validity experienced throughout health professions education. MAIN TEXT: We offer our experience and empirical evidence of this simulation practice, based on an institutional ethnographic examination of the involvement of real patients in summative OSCEs from an undergraduate medical school in the UK. Our critique demonstrates the merits of this approach as an assessment environment closer to the real clinical environments where these soon-to-be doctors interact in a more authentic way with real patients and their illness experiences. We balance this against the extra work required for all involved and suggest the biggest challenge is in the reorientation work required for both Faculty and students who are institutionalised to expect standardisation above all in assessment. CONCLUSION: We advocate for involving real patients in summative OSCEs and hope that readers may feel compelled and empowered to foster this shift in mindset required to introduce this practice into their assessments.

11.
Clin Teach ; 19(3): 257-259, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35347858
12.
14.
Med Teach ; 43(1): 27-31, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32767903

RESUMO

Dutch general practitioners (GPs) and medical specialists (MSs) create collaborative patient care agreements (CPCAs) to improve intraprofessional collaboration. We set out to identify contradictions between the activity systems of primary and secondary care that could result in expansive learning and new ways of working collaboratively. We analysed nineteen semi-structured interviews using activity theory (AT) as a theoretical framework and using these two activity systems as the units of analysis. There were contradictions within and between the activity systems related, for example, to different understandings of 'care' in generalist and specialist settings. GPs and MSs were able to identify contradictions and learn expansively when they iteratively co-created CPCAs in groups. They found it much harder to tackle contradictions, however, when they disseminated these tools within their respective professional communities, leaving unresolved contradictions and missed opportunities for collaboration. This research shows the educational benefits of taking collective responsibility for improving collaborative patient care.


Assuntos
Medicina , Especialização , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Assistência ao Paciente
16.
Med Teach ; 41(10): 1098-1105, 2019 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31382787

RESUMO

The problem: Clinical practice commonly presents new doctors with situations that they are incapable of managing safely. This harms patients and stresses the new doctors and other clinicians. Unpreparedness for practice remains a problem despite changes in curricula from apprenticeship to outcome-based designs. This is unsurprising because capability depends on learning from practical experience in supportive learning environments. To assure the care of patients and well-being of residents, the pedagogy of medical students' practice-based education is in urgent need of an overhaul. This Guide: Experience based learning (ExBL) is a 21st century pedagogy of practice-based learning, derived from best current theory and evidence. ExBL specifies capabilities that medical students need to acquire from practical experience. It exemplifies how clinicians' behavior can help students gain experience. It explains how reflection converts real patient learning into capability and identity. It identifies desirable features of learning environments. This Guide advises clinicians, students, placement leads, faculty developers, and other stakeholders how to make new doctors as capable as possible. ExBL is a comprehensive model of medical students' practice-based learning, which complements competency-based education to prepare new doctors to deliver safe, effective, and compassionate care.


Assuntos
Educação Médica/métodos , Aprendizagem Baseada em Problemas/métodos , Humanos , Relações Interprofissionais , Apoio Social , Estudantes de Medicina
17.
Perspect Med Educ ; 8(1): 17-24, 2019 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30742252

RESUMO

This 'A Qualitative Space' article takes a critical look at Dorothy Smith's approach to inquiry known as institutional ethnography and its potentiality in contemporary health professions education research. We delve into institutional ethnography's philosophical underpinnings, setting out the ontological shift that the researcher needs to make within this critical feminist approach. We use examples of research into frontline healthcare, into the health work of patients and into education to allow the reader to consider what an institutional ethnography research project might offer. We lay out our vision for potential growth for institutional ethnography research within the health professions education field and explain why we see this as the opportune moment to adopt institutional ethnography to meet some of the challenges facing health professions education in a way that offers informed change.


Assuntos
Antropologia Cultural , Ocupações em Saúde/educação , Projetos de Pesquisa , Humanos , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Teoria Social
18.
Adv Simul (Lond) ; 3: 11, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29983995

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Working with standardised or simulated patients (SPs) is now commonplace in Simulated Learning Environments. Embracing the fact that they are not a homogenous group, some literature suggests expansion of learning with SPs in health professional education by foregrounding their personal experiences. Intimate examination teaching, whether with or without the help of SPs, is protected by a particular degree of ceremony given the degree of potential vulnerability. However, other examinations may be equally intrusive for example the close proximity of an eye examination or a chest examination in a female patient. In this study, we looked at SPs' experiences of boundary crossing in any examinations, sensitised by Foucault's concept of the clinical gaze. We wished to problematise power relations that construct and subject SPs as clinical tools within simulation-based education. METHODS: We collected data from 22 SPs, through five focus groups. Analysis was an iterative process, using thematic analysis. Data collection and reflexive analysis continued iteratively until concepts were fully developed and all theoretical directions explored. RESULTS: Students and SPs construct simulated teaching consultations by negotiating the unequal distribution of power between them. The SPs themselves discussed how they, perhaps unknowingly, acted in accordance with the discourse of the clinical gaze. However, SPs became disempowered when students deviated from the negotiated terms of consent and they used their agency to resist this. The SPs used strong sexual metaphors to express the subjugation they experienced, as discourses of sexuality and gender played out in the Simulated Learning Environment. CONCLUSION: We demonstrate that power dynamics and the clinical gaze can have important consequences within the Simulated Learning Environment. Every physical examination can be potentially 'intimate' and can therefore be underpinned by discourses of sexuality and gendered undertones. In partnership with SPs, simulation-based education should create a teaching space that no longer fosters the discourse of the clinical gaze but facilitates students to learn to reflectively navigate, in the moment, the fine line between touching patients versus touching loved ones, and the blurred boundaries that exist in the gulf between sexual contact and benevolent touch.

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