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2.
BMJ Open ; 13(5): e069101, 2023 05 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37137555

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Factors contributing to the stressful transition from student to doctor include issues with preparedness for practice, adjusting to new status and responsibility, and variable support. Existing transitional interventions provide inconsistent participation, responsibility and legitimacy in the clinical environment. Enhanced support by near peers for new doctors may ease the transition. Irish medical graduates of 2020 commenced work early, creating an unprecedented period of overlap between new graduates and the cohort 1 year ahead. OBJECTIVE: To explore the experience of commencing practice for these new doctors with this increased near-peer support. DESIGN: We used interpretive phenomenological analysis as our methodological approach, informed by the cognitive apprenticeship model, to explore the experience of enhanced near-peer support at the transition to practice. Participants recorded audio diaries from their commencement of work, and a semistructured interview was conducted with each, after 3 months, concerning their experience of their overlap with the previous year's interns. SETTING: University College Cork, one of six medical schools in Ireland. PARTICIPANTS: Nine newly qualified medical doctors. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: An exploration of their experience of transition to clinical practice, in the context of this enhanced near-peer support, will inform strategies to ease the transition from student to doctor. RESULTS: Participants felt reassured by having a near-peer in the same role and safe to seek their support. This empowered them to gradually assume increasing responsibility and to challenge themselves to further their learning. Participants perceived that commencing work before the annual change-over of other grades of doctor-in-training enhanced their professional identities and improved patient safety. CONCLUSIONS: Enhanced near-peer support for new doctors offers a potential solution to the stressful transition to practice. Participants were legitimate members of the community of practice, with the status and responsibility of first-year doctors. Furthermore, this study reinforces the benefit of asynchronous job change-over for doctors-in-training.


Subject(s)
Physicians , Students , Humans , Universities , Learning , Physicians/psychology , Peer Group , Clinical Competence , Qualitative Research
3.
BMC Med Educ ; 23(1): 109, 2023 Feb 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36782187

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: The challenging nature of the transition from medical student to doctor is highlighted by the associated negative consequences to new doctors' mental health and wellbeing. Enhanced understanding of the lived experience of recent medical graduates as they move through the stages of transition over the first year of practice can inform interventions to ease the difficulties encountered. METHODS: Using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA), a novel approach to this topic, we explored the lived experience of transition from student to doctor over the first year of practice after graduation. Twelve new graduates were purposively recruited. We conducted semi-structured interviews at the end of their first year of practice with respect to their experience over the first year. RESULTS: The experience of transition was characterised by overlapping temporal stages. Participants' initial adjustment period was characterised by shock, coping and stabilisation. A phase of development followed, with growth in confidence and a focus on self-care. Adversity was experienced in the form of interprofessional tensions, overwork, isolation and mistreatment. Finally, a period of reflection and rationalisation marked the end of the first year. DISCUSSION: Following initial anxiety regarding competence and performance, participants' experience of transition was predominantly influenced by cultural, relational and contextual aspects of clinical practice. Solutions to ease this challenging time include stage-specific transitional interventions, curricular change at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels and a re-evaluation of the clinical learning environment to mitigate the difficulties endured.


Subject(s)
Physicians , Students, Medical , Humans , Physicians/psychology , Learning , Students, Medical/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Clinical Competence , Qualitative Research
4.
BMJ Open ; 11(9): e053423, 2021 09 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34551956

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To explore and compare the perspectives of junior doctors in Brazil and Ireland regarding transition and professional socialisation during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the purpose of identifying better ways to support doctors as they assume their new professional role. DESIGN: 27 semistructured interviews. Transcripts were analysed using qualitative thematic analysis. Cruess' framework of professional socialisation in medicine supported the interpretation of these data. SETTING: Public health hospitals across four Brazilian states (Santa Catarina, São Paulo, Ceará, Paraíba) and County Cork in the South of Ireland. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-seven male and female medical junior doctors who had graduated between November 2019 and April 2020. RESULTS: Fourteen Brazilian and 13 Irish junior doctors were interviewed for this study. Entry to clinical practice during the pandemic had a significant impact on factors influencing the professional socialisation of junior doctors. This impact was reflected across the following six thematic areas: lack of preparedness; disrupted trajectory of role adaptation; fewer opportunities for experiential learning; solidarity and isolation; altered interactions with patients; challenges to health and well-being. CONCLUSIONS: Transition to clinical practice is an important stage in junior doctors' professional socialisation and identity formation. The COVID-19 pandemic created the opportunity for medical graduates to enter the workforce earlier than usual. Entering the workforce during this period created a lack of confidence among junior doctors concerning the boundaries of their new role and responsibilities, while simultaneously disrupting their social integration. Priorities to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 and future pandemics on this transition are presented.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Pandemics , Brazil/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Ireland/epidemiology , Male , SARS-CoV-2
6.
Med Educ ; 53(7): 698-709, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31094039

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: The transition to clinical practice is challenging. Lack of preparedness and issues with support, responsibility and complex workplace interactions contribute to the difficulties encountered. The first year of clinical practice is associated with negative consequences for new doctors' health and well-being. The contemporaneous lived experience of new graduates on the threshold of clinical practice has not been described. Deeper understanding of this phase may inform interventions to ease the transition from student to doctor. METHODS: We used interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) to explore the individual experience of making the transition from medical student to doctor, focusing on the period prior to commencing clinical practice. Fourteen recent graduates were purposively recruited, and semi-structured interviews were conducted with each, with respect to how they anticipated the transition. RESULTS: We draw on the metaphor of the actor 'waiting in the wings' to describe participants' lived experience on the threshold of practice. The experience of the actor, about to step into the spotlight, was mirrored in participants' perceptions of an abrupt transformation to come, mixed feelings about what lay ahead, and the various strategies that they had planned to help them to perform their new role convincingly. DISCUSSION: Participants in this study braced themselves for a trial by ordeal as they contemplated commencing clinical practice. The hidden curriculum shaped their understanding of what was expected of them as new doctors, and inspired dysfunctional strategies to meet expectations. Solutions to make the experience a more positive one lie in the approximation of the roles of senior medical student and newly qualified doctor, in explicitly addressing the hidden curriculum and generating cultural change. An emphasis on experience-based learning through contribution to patient care, guided reflection on the hidden curriculum and shifting cultural expectations through faculty development and strong local leadership can contribute to these objectives.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Internship and Residency , Learning Curve , Workplace/psychology , Education, Medical , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Qualitative Research
8.
Lancet ; 363(9420): 1509-13, 2004 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15135598

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Individuals who chronically excrete neurovirulent poliovirus of vaccine-origin are of considerable concern to the Global Polio Eradication programme. Chronic infection with such polioviruses is a recognised complication of hypogammaglobulinaemia. METHODS: We did a series of in-vitro and in-vivo therapeutic studies, with a view to clearing persistent neurovirulent poliovirus infection in an individual with common variable immunodeficiency, using oral immunoglobulin, breast milk (as a source of secretory IgA), ribavirin, and the anti-picornaviral agent pleconaril. We undertook viral quantitation, antibody neutralisation and drug susceptibility assays, and viral gene sequencing. FINDINGS: Long-term asymptomatic excretion of vaccine-derived neurovirulent poliovirus 2 was identified in this hypogammaglobulinaemic man, and was estimated to have persisted for up to 22 years. Despite demonstrable in-vitro neutralising activity of immunoglobulin and breast milk, and in-vitro antiviral activity of ribavirin, no treatment was successful at clearing the virus, although in one trial breast milk significantly reduced excretion levels temporarily. During the course of study, the virus developed reduced susceptibility to pleconaril, precluding the in-vivo use of this drug. Sequence analysis revealed the emergence of a methionine to leucine mutation adjacent to the likely binding site of pleconaril in these isolates. INTERPRETATION: Chronic vaccine-associated poliovirus infection in hypogammaglobulinaemia is a difficult condition to treat. It represents a risk to the strategy to discontinue polio vaccination once global eradication has been achieved.


Subject(s)
Carrier State/therapy , Common Variable Immunodeficiency/virology , Poliomyelitis/virology , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/adverse effects , Poliovirus/isolation & purification , Adult , Animals , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Capsid Proteins/genetics , Carrier State/immunology , Carrier State/virology , Common Variable Immunodeficiency/immunology , Feces/virology , Haplorhini , Humans , Immunoglobulins, Intravenous/therapeutic use , Male , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Milk, Human/immunology , Mutation , Poliomyelitis/etiology , Poliomyelitis/immunology , Poliomyelitis/therapy , Poliovirus/drug effects , Poliovirus/genetics , Poliovirus/pathogenicity , Treatment Failure , Virulence
9.
Curr Gastroenterol Rep ; 4(5): 373-82, 2002 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12228039

ABSTRACT

Adverse reactions to foods are commonly implicated in the causation of ill health. However, foreign antigens, including food proteins and commensal microbes encountered in the gastrointestinal tract, are usually well tolerated. True food allergies, implying immune-mediated adverse responses to food antigens, do exist, however, and are especially common in infants and young children. Allergic reactions to food manifest clinically in a variety of presentations involving the gastrointestinal, cutaneous, and respiratory systems and in generalized reactions such as anaphylaxis. Both IgE-mediated and non-IgE-mediated immune mechanisms are recognized. Important advances in the clinical features underlying specific food hypersensitivity disorders are reviewed.


Subject(s)
Anaphylaxis/diagnosis , Anaphylaxis/epidemiology , Food Hypersensitivity/diagnosis , Food Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Hypersensitivity, Delayed/diagnosis , Hypersensitivity, Delayed/epidemiology , Adult , Age Distribution , Allergens/adverse effects , Anaphylaxis/therapy , Animals , Child, Preschool , Food Hypersensitivity/therapy , Humans , Hypersensitivity, Delayed/therapy , Incidence , Infant , Ireland/epidemiology , Milk Hypersensitivity/diagnosis , Milk Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Milk Hypersensitivity/therapy , Prognosis , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Distribution , Skin Tests , Syndrome
10.
Drugs Aging ; 19(7): 515-27, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12182688

ABSTRACT

Normal aging is associated with significant changes in the function of most organs and tissues. In this regard, the gastrointestinal tract is no exception. The purpose of this review is to detail the important age-related changes in motor function of the various parts of the gastrointestinal tract and to highlight some of the important motility changes that may occur, either in relation to common age-related disorders, or as a result of certain drugs commonly prescribed in the aged. A major confounding factor in the interpretation of motor phenomena throughout the gastrointestinal tract in this age group is the frequent coexistence of neurological, endocrinological and other disease states, which may be independently associated with dysmotility. Overall, current data are insufficient to implicate normal aging as a cause of dysmotility in the elderly. Normal aging is associated with various changes in gastrointestinal motility, but the clinical significance of such changes remains unclear. More important is the impact of various age-related diseases on gastrointestinal motility in the elderly: for example, long-standing diabetes mellitus may reduce gastric emptying in up to 50% of patients; depression significantly prolongs whole-gut transit time; hypothyroidism may prolong oro-caecal transit time; and chronic renal failure is associated with impaired gastric emptying. In addition, various, frequently used drugs in the elderly cause disordered gastrointestinal motility. These drugs include anticholinergics, especially antidepressants with an anticholinergic effect, opioid analgesics and calcium antagonists.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Gastrointestinal Diseases/physiopathology , Gastrointestinal Motility/physiology , Aged , Animals , Gastrointestinal Diseases/chemically induced , Gastrointestinal Diseases/etiology , Humans , Iatrogenic Disease
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