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1.
BMC Med Educ ; 24(1): 228, 2024 Mar 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38439059

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Medical students experience emotional challenges during their undergraduate education, often related to work-based learning. Consequently, they may experience feelings of uncertainty and self-doubt, which can negatively affect their well-being. Therefore, it is crucial to support students' development of their ability to manage distressful situations. Self-efficacy beliefs may be a central aspect of supporting them in this development, and have been shown to relate to resilient factors such as students' motivation, learning, and well-being. METHODS: We constructed a scale to measure medical students' physician self-efficacy to manage emotional challenges during work-based learning, the PSMEC scale. The aim of the present study was to evaluate some of the psychometric properties of the PSMEC scale. The scale consists of 17 items covering five subscales: (1) medical knowledge and competence, (2) communication with difficult patients and delivering bad news, (3) being questioned and challenged, (4) educative competence in patient encounters, and (5) ability to establish and maintain relationships with healthcare professionals. Data were collected from 655 medical students from all seven medical schools in Sweden. To investigate the scale's dimensionality and measurement invariance with regard to gender and time in education, single and multiple group confirmatory factor models were estimated using techniques suitable for ordered categorical data. Measures of Cronbach's alpha were calculated to evaluate internal consistency. RESULTS: The scale showed good internal consistency on both the global dimension and the five subdimensions of self-efficacy. In addition, the scale was shown to be measurement invariant across genders and times in education, indicating that the scale means of male and female medical students and the scale means of students at the middle and end of their education can be compared. CONCLUSIONS: The physician self-efficacy to manage emotional challenges scale demonstrated satisfactory psychometric properties, with regards to dimensionality, internal consistency, and measurement invariance relating to gender and time in education, and this study supports the usefulness of this scale when measuring self-efficacy in relation to emotional challenges.


Assuntos
Médicos , Estudantes de Medicina , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Autoeficácia , Escolaridade , Pessoal de Saúde
2.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 28(5): 1557-1578, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37184676

RESUMO

In their interactions with patients and health care professionals during work-based learning, medical students are known to experience emotionally challenging situations that can evoke negative feelings. Students have to manage these emotions. Students learn and develop their professional identity formation through interactions with patients and members of the healthcare teams. Earlier studies have highlighted the issues involved with processing emotionally challenging situations, although studies concerning learning and professional identity formation in response to these experiences are rare. In this study, we explored medical students' experiences of emotionally challenging situations in work-based learning, and the impact these experiences had on forming medical students' professional identities. We conducted an analysis of narrative data (n = 85), using a constructivist grounded theory approach. The narratives were made up of medical students' reflective essays at the end of their education (tenth term). The analysis showed that students' main concern when facing emotionally challenging situations during their work-based education was the struggle to achieve and maintain a professional approach. They reported different strategies for managing their feelings and how these strategies led to diverse consequences. In the process, students also described arriving at insights into their own personal needs and shortcomings. We consider this development of self-awareness and resulting self-knowledge to be an important part of the continuously ongoing socialization process of forming a professional identity. Thus, experiencing emotionally challenging situations can be considered a unique and invaluable opportunity, as well as a catalyst for students' development. We believe that highlighting the impact of emotions in medical education can constitute an important contribution to knowledge about the process of professional identity formation. This knowledge can enable faculty to provide students with more effective and sufficient support, facilitating their journey in becoming physicians.


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Identificação Social , Aprendizagem , Narração
3.
BMC Med Educ ; 23(1): 935, 2023 Dec 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38066519

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Clinical practice gives medical students opportunities to develop clinical skills and to gain insight into their future profession as a physician. Students in the medical programme at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden had clinical practice in primary health care in nine of their 11 semesters. The aim of this study was to explore medical students' perceptions of learning from patient encounters in a primary health care context. METHODS: The study was a qualitative inductive interview study. The 21 participating medical students were from their 3rd, 4th and 5th (final year) year of the study programme. A semi-structured interview guide was used. The data analysis was performed with qualitative content analysis. RESULTS: The overarching theme of the study was: The individual patient encounters are the key to learning in primary health care. The patient encounters presented both useful opportunities and challenges that could contribute to the students' professional development. The following four categories were found: 1. Patient encounters in are instructive, rewarding and challenging. Practising in primary health care provided experience in meeting and communicating with a wide variety of patients. Students described it being challenging to trust in their own clinical competence and feeling a responsibility towards the patients. 2. Encounters with patients in primary health care provide opportunities for gradual professional development. Students had the opportunity of increasing independence based on their level of clinical competence. They experienced a progression in their professional development after each period in primary health care. 3. A committed supervisor plays a significant role in learning. Committed supervisors who set aside time for supervision, offered support, and encouraged the student, played an important role in the student's learning. 4. Learning in primary health care and learning in hospitals complement one another. It could be difficult for the students to sort out exactly where they learnt different things as they perceived that learning in primary health care and in hospitals complemented one another. CONCLUSIONS: The students' encounters with authentic patients in primary health care gave them recurring opportunities to develop communication skills and to be trusted to work on their own under supervision, giving them guidance on their way to becoming future physicians.


Assuntos
Médicos , Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Atenção Primária à Saúde , Percepção , Competência Clínica
4.
Med Educ ; 53(10): 1037-1048, 2019 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31509285

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Health care students face many situations during their education that might be emotionally challenging. Students are confronted with illness, suffering, death, patient treatment dilemmas, and witnessing unprofessional behaviour on the part of health care professionals. Few studies have focused on what these experiences lead to in relation to the process of becoming a professional. The purpose of the study was to explore medical students' main concerns relating to emotionally challenging situations during their medical education. METHODS: A constructivist grounded theory approach was used to explore and analyse medical students' experiences. Data were gathered by means of focus group interviews, including two interviews in the middle and two interviews at the end of the students' undergraduate programme. A total of 14 medical students participated. RESULTS: Students' main concerns relating to emotionally challenging situations were feelings of uncertainty. These feelings of uncertainty concerned: (i) insufficient knowledge and skills; (ii) the struggle to manage emotions in patient encounters; (iii) perceived negative culture and values amongst health care professionals and in the health care system, and (iv) lacking a self-evident position on the health care team. The first two aspects relate to uncertainties concerning their own capabilities and the other two aspects relate to uncertainties regarding the detached medical culture and the unclear expectations of them as students in the health care team. CONCLUSIONS: In the process of becoming a physician, students develop their professional identity in constant negotiation with their own perceptions, values and norms and what they experience in the local clinical context in which they participate during workplace education. The two dimensions that students have to resolve during this process concern the questions: Do I have what it takes? Do I want to belong to this medical culture? Until these struggles are resolved, students are likely to experience worry about their future professional role.


Assuntos
Emoções , Aprendizagem , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Incerteza , Local de Trabalho/psicologia , Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Feminino , Grupos Focais , Teoria Fundamentada , Humanos , Masculino , Cultura Organizacional , Pesquisa Qualitativa
5.
Nurs Inq ; 25(2): e12216, 2018 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28776798

RESUMO

Interprofessional collaboration involves some kind of knowledge sharing, which is essential and will be important in the future in regard to the opportunities and challenges in practices for delivering safe and effective health care. Nursing assistants are seldom mentioned as a group of health care workers that contribute to interprofessional collaboration in health care practice. The aim of this ethnographic study was to explore how the nursing assistants' knowledge can be shared in a team on a spinal cord injury rehabilitation ward. Using a sociomaterial perspective on practice, we captured different aspects of interprofessional collaboration in health care. The findings reveal how knowledge was shared between professionals, depending on different kinds of practice architecture. These specific cultural-discursive, material-economic, and social-political arrangements enabled possibilities through which nursing assistants' knowledge informed other practices, and others' knowledge informed the practice of nursing assistants. By studying what health care professionals actually do and say in practice, we found that the nursing assistants could make a valuable contribution of knowledge to the team.


Assuntos
Disseminação de Informação/métodos , Relações Interprofissionais , Assistentes de Enfermagem/educação , Antropologia Cultural/métodos , Humanos , Assistentes de Enfermagem/psicologia , Suécia
6.
BMC Med Educ ; 16(1): 308, 2016 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27905932

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Clinical learning takes place in complex socio-cultural environments that are workplaces for the staff and learning places for the students. In the clinical context, the students learn by active participation and in interaction with the rest of the community at the workplace. Clinical learning occurs outside the university, therefore is it important for both the university and the student that the student is given opportunities to evaluate the clinical placements with an instrument that allows evaluation from many perspectives. The instrument Clinical Learning Environment and Supervision (CLES) was originally developed for evaluation of nursing students' clinical learning environment. The aim of this study was to adapt and validate the CLES instrument to measure medical students' perceptions of their learning environment in primary health care. METHODS: In the adaptation process the face validity was tested by an expert panel of primary care physicians, who were also active clinical supervisors. The adapted CLES instrument with 25 items and six background questions was sent electronically to 1,256 medical students from one university. Answers from 394 students were eligible for inclusion. Exploratory factor analysis based on principal component methods followed by oblique rotation was used to confirm the adequate number of factors in the data. Construct validity was assessed by factor analysis. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to confirm the dimensions of CLES instrument. RESULTS: The construct validity showed a clearly indicated four-factor model. The cumulative variance explanation was 0.65, and the overall Cronbach's alpha was 0.95. All items loaded similarly with the dimensions in the non-adapted CLES except for one item that loaded to another dimension. The CLES instrument in its adapted form had high construct validity and high reliability and internal consistency. CONCLUSION: CLES, in its adapted form, appears to be a valid instrument to evaluate medical students' perceptions of their clinical learning environment in primary health care.


Assuntos
Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Atenção Primária à Saúde , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Competência Clínica/normas , Educação de Graduação em Medicina/normas , Avaliação Educacional , Análise Fatorial , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Estudantes de Medicina/estatística & dados numéricos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Suécia/epidemiologia , Local de Trabalho
7.
BMC Med Educ ; 16: 148, 2016 May 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27189483

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The debriefing phase is an important feature of simulation activities for learning. This study applies a sociomaterial perspective on debriefing in interprofessional simulation with medical and nursing students. Sociomaterial perspectives are increasingly being used in order to understand professional practice and learning in new ways, conceptualising professional practice as being embodied, relational and situated in sociomaterial relations. The aim of the study is to explore how debriefing is carried out as a practice supporting students' interprofessional learning. METHODS: Eighteen debriefing sessions following interprofessional full-scale manikin-based simulation with nursing and medical students from two different universities were video-recorded and analysed collaboratively by a team of researchers, applying a structured scheme for constant comparative analysis. RESULTS: The findings show how debriefing is intertwined with, and shaped by social and material relationships. Two patterns of enacting debriefing emerged. Debriefing as algorithm was enacted as a protocol-based, closed inquiry approach. Debriefing as laissez-faire was enacted as a loosely structured collegial conversation with an open inquiry approach. CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that neither an imposed structure of the debriefing, nor the lack of structure assured interprofessional collaboration to emerge as a salient topic for reflection, even though that was an explicit learning objective for the simulation.


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Bacharelado em Enfermagem , Feedback Formativo , Relações Interprofissionais , Treinamento por Simulação , Algoritmos , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Manequins , Modelos Educacionais , Fatores Sociológicos
8.
J Interprof Care ; 30(4): 441-7, 2016 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27197005

RESUMO

Full-scale simulation exercises are becoming more common as an educational feature of the undergraduate training of health professionals. This study explores how interprofessional collaboration is enacted by the participating students. Practice theory is used as the theoretical framework for a field study of two naturalistic educational settings, when medical and nursing students come together to practice in a simulated emergency situation, where a manikin is replacing the patient. Eighteen sessions of simulations were observed, and data were collected through standardised video recordings that were analysed collaboratively. To ensure transparency and scientific rigour, a stepwise constant comparative analysis was conducted, in which individual observations within and across single video recordings were compared, negotiated and eventually merged. The findings show that the student teams relate to the manikin as a technical, medical, and human body, and that interprofessional knowings and enactments emerge as a fluid movement between bodily positioning in synchrony and bodily positioning out of synchrony in relation to the sociomaterial arrangements. The findings are related to contemporary theorisations of practice comprising an integrated view of body and mind, and it is discussed how the findings can be used in simulation exercises to support participants' learning in new ways.


Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Relações Interprofissionais , Estudantes de Medicina , Estudantes de Enfermagem , Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Atenção à Saúde , Pesquisa Empírica , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Manequins , Gravação em Vídeo
9.
J Interprof Care ; 30(6): 710-716, 2016 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27436691

RESUMO

Simulation exercises are becoming more common as an educational feature of the undergraduate training of health professionals. Not all students participate in these activities, but are assigned as observers of the actual simulation. This article presents a study that explored how social-material arrangements for observation of interprofessional collaboration in a simulated situation are enacted and how these observations are thematised and made relevant for learning. The empirical data consisted of 18 standardised video recordings of medical and nursing students observing their peer students simulate. Practice theory is used to show how observation is embodied, relational, and situated in social-material relations. The findings show two emerging ways of enacting observation-proximate observation and distant observation. The enactments are characterised by different socio-material arrangements concerning the location where the simulation took place and its material set-up as well as embodied "doings" and "relatings" between the observing students and instructors. The observing students are participating in a passive, normative position as an audience and as judges of what is correct professional behaviour.


Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Relações Interprofissionais , Estudantes de Medicina , Estudantes de Enfermagem , Pessoal de Saúde , Humanos , Aprendizagem
10.
Educ Health (Abingdon) ; 27(1): 15-23, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24934938

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The healthcare system is complex and the education of medical and nursing students is not always a priority within it. However, education offered at the point of care provides students with opportunities to apply knowledge, and to develop the necessary skills and attitudes needed to practice their future profession. The major objective of this study was to identify students' views of generic aspects of the healthcare environment that influences their progress towards professional competence. METHODS: We collected free text answers of 75 medical students and 23 nursing students who had completed an extensive questionnaire concerning their learning in clinical wards. In order to obtain richer data and a deeper understanding, we also interviewed a purposive sample of students. Qualitative content analysis was conducted. RESULTS: We identified three themes: (1) How management, planning and organising for learning enabled content and learning activities to relate to the syllabus and workplace, and how this management influenced space and resources for supervision and learning; (2) Workplace culture elucidated how hierarchies and communication affected student learning and influenced their professional development and (3) Learning a profession illustrated the importance of supervisors' approaches to students, their enthusiasm and ability to build relationships, and their feedback to students on performance. DISCUSSION: From a student perspective, a valuable learning environment is characterised as one where management, planning and organising are aligned and support learning. Students experience a professional growth when the community of practice accepts them, and competent and enthusiastic supervisors give them opportunities to interact with patients and to develop their own responsibilities.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Estudantes de Enfermagem/psicologia , Adulto , Competência Clínica , Atenção à Saúde/organização & administração , Educação Médica/métodos , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Inquéritos e Questionários , Local de Trabalho/psicologia , Adulto Jovem
11.
Resusc Plus ; 17: 100542, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38268848

RESUMO

Aim: Dispatcher-assisted cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DA-CPR) is time-dependent. To date, evidence-based training programmes for dispatchers are lacking. This study aimed to reach expert consensus on an educational bundle content for dispatchers to provide DA-CPR using the Delphi method. Method: An educational bundle was created by the Swedish Resuscitation Council consisting of three parts: e-learning on DA-CPR, basic life support training and audit of emergency out-of-hospital cardiac arrest calls. Thereafter, a two-round modified Delphi study was conducted between November 2022 and March 2023; 37 experts with broad clinical and/or scientific knowledge of DA-CPR were invited. In the first round, the experts participated in the e-learning module and answered a questionnaire with 13 closed and open questions, whereafter the e-learning part of the bundle was revised. In the second round, the revised e-learning part was evaluated using Likert scores (20 items). The predefined consensus level was set at 80%. Results: Delphi rounds one and two were assessed by 20 and 18 of the invited experts, respectively. In round one, 18 experts (18 of 20, 90%) stated that they did not miss any content in the programme. In round two, the scale-level content validity index based on the average method (S-CVI/AVE, 0.99) and scale-level content validity index based on universal agreement (S-CVI/UA, 0.85) exceeded the threshold level of 80%. Conclusion: Expert consensus on the educational bundle content was reached using the Delphi method. Further work is required to evaluate its effect in real-world out-of-hospital cardiac arrest calls.

12.
Med Educ ; 47(3): 261-70, 2013 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23398012

RESUMO

CONTEXT: Phenomenography is a qualitative approach to research which has revolutionised the way that researchers and teachers think about the processes and outcomes of learning in higher education. Phenomenography has also been used successfully in medical and health care research for the last 20 years. Phenomenography provides a lens through which to view certain types of research question. It also provides direction for how to empirically carry out the research. METHODS: This paper introduces phenomenography as a viable qualitative approach for use in medical education research. RESULTS: A phenomenographic study maps the qualitatively different ways in which people experience a phenomenon. This type of study can have an important impact on, for example, patient communication, clinical practice and health care education. CONCLUSION: We suggest that a phenomenographic approach can be used to explore many medical education research issues, and can facilitate more solid links between research and educational development and change.


Assuntos
Compreensão , Educação Médica , Aprendizagem , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Projetos de Pesquisa , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto/métodos , Relações Pesquisador-Sujeito , Ensino
13.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 18(1): 99-114, 2013 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22395307

RESUMO

Learning manual skills is a fundamental part of health care education, and motor, sensory and cognitive learning processes are essential aspects of professional development. Simulator training has been shown to enhance factors that facilitate motor and cognitive learning. The present study aimed to investigate the students' experiences and thoughts about their learning through simulation skills training. The study was designed for an educational setting at a clinical skills centre. Ten third-year undergraduate nursing students performed urethral catheterisation, using the virtual reality simulator UrecathVision™, which has haptic properties. The students practised in pairs. Each session was videotaped and the video was used to stimulate recall in subsequent interviews. The interviews were analysed using qualitative content analysis. The analysis from interviews resulted in three themes: what the students learn, how the students learn, and the simulator's contribution to the students' learning. Students learned manual skills, how to perform the procedure, and professional behaviour. They learned by preparing, watching, practising and reflecting. The simulator contributed by providing opportunities for students to prepare for the skills training, to see anatomical structures, to feel resistance, and to become aware of their own performance ability. The findings show that the students related the task to previous experiences, used sensory information, tested themselves and practised techniques in a hands-on fashion, and reflected in and on action. The simulator was seen as a facilitator to learning the manual skills. The study design, with students working in pairs combined with video recording, was found to enhance opportunities for reflection.


Assuntos
Competência Clínica , Simulação por Computador , Bacharelado em Enfermagem/métodos , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Estudantes de Enfermagem , Interface Usuário-Computador , Gravação de Videoteipe , Adulto Jovem
14.
J Interprof Care ; 27(6): 476-81, 2013 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23805862

RESUMO

Interprofessional training wards (IPTWs), aiming to enhance interprofessional collaboration, have been implemented in medical education and evaluated over the last decade. The Faculty of Health Sciences, Linköping University has, in collaboration with the local health provider, arranged such training wards since 1996, involving students from the medical, nursing, physiotherapy, and occupational therapy programs. Working together across professional boundaries is seen as a necessity in the future to achieve sustainable and safe healthcare. Therefore, educators need to arrange learning contexts which enhance students' interprofessional learning. This article shows aspects of how the arrangement of an IPTW can influence the students' collaboration and learning. Data from open-ended questions from a questionnaire survey, during autumn term 2010 and spring term 2011 at an IPTW, was analyzed qualitatively using a theoretical framework of practice theory. The theoretical lens gave a picture of how architectures of the IPTW create a clash between the "expected" professional responsibilities and the "unexpected" responsibilities of caring work. Also revealed was how the proximity between students opens up contexts for negotiations and boundary work. The value of using a theoretical framework of professional learning in practice within the frames of healthcare education is discussed.


Assuntos
Ocupações em Saúde/educação , Relações Interprofissionais , Aprendizagem , Estudantes de Ciências da Saúde , Adulto , Comportamento Cooperativo , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Inquéritos e Questionários , Suécia
15.
Educ Health (Abingdon) ; 26(3): 156-63, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25001348

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Helping students learn to apply their newly learned basic science knowledge to clinical situations is a long-standing challenge for medical educators. This study aims to describe how medical students' knowledge of the basic sciences is construed toward the end of their medical curriculum, focusing on how senior medical students explain the physiology of a given scenario. Methods A group of final-year medical students from two universities was investigated. Interviews were performed and phenomenographic analysis was used to interpret students' understanding of the physiology underlying the onset of fatigue in an individual on an exercise bicycle. RESULTS: Three categories of description depict the qualitatively different ways the students conceptualized fatigue. A first category depicts well integrated physiological and bio-chemical knowledge characterized by equilibrium and causality. The second category contains conceptions of finite amount of substrate and juxtaposition of physiological concepts that are not fully integrated. The third category exhibits a fragmented understanding of disparate sections of knowledge without integration of basic science and clinical knowledge. DISCUSSION: Distinctive conceptions of fatigue based with varying completeness of students' understanding characterized the three identified categories. The students' conceptions of fatigue were based on varying understanding of how organ systems relate and of the thresholds that determine physiological processes. Medical instruction should focus on making governing steps in biological processes clear and providing opportunity for causal explanations of clinical scenarios containing bio-chemical as well as clinical knowledge. This augments earlier findings by adding descriptions in terms of the subject matter studied about how basic science is applied by students in clinical settings.


Assuntos
Competência Clínica , Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Fadiga , Aprendizagem Baseada em Problemas , Estudantes de Medicina , Adulto , Fadiga/fisiopatologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Suécia , Adulto Jovem
16.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 16(2): 197-210, 2011 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20978840

RESUMO

The aim of this study was to describe the different ways medical teachers understand what constitutes a good teacher and a good clinical supervisor and what similarities and differences they report between them. Data was gathered through interviews with 39 undergraduate teachers at a medical university. The transcripts were analysed using a phenomenographic approach. Three categories regarding what it means to be a good teacher and clinical supervisor respectively were identified. Similarities between the two hierarchies were seen with the most inclusive categories of understanding what it means to be a good teacher or supervisor focuses on students' learning or growth. In the third category a good teacher and supervisor is seen as someone who conveys knowledge or shows how things are done. However, the role of being a clinical supervisor was perceived as containing a clearer focus on professional development and role modelling than the teacher role did. This is shown in the middle category where a good clinical supervisor is understood as a role model and someone who shares what it is like to be a doctor. The middle category of understanding what it means to be a good teacher instead focussing on the teacher as someone who responds to students' content requests in a partially student-centred perspective. In comparing the ways individual respondents understood the two roles, this study also implies that teachers appear to compartmentalise their roles as teachers and clinical supervisors respectively.


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina/métodos , Docentes de Medicina/normas , Faculdades de Medicina/normas , Ensino/métodos , Escolaridade , Pesquisa Empírica , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Competência Profissional , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Suécia
17.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 16(3): 331-45, 2011 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21656337

RESUMO

Computerised virtual patients (VPs) are increasingly being used in medical education. With more use of this technology, there is a need to increase the knowledge of students' experiences with VPs. The aim of the study was to elicit the nature of virtual patients in a clinical setting, taking the students' experience as a point of departure. Thirty-one students used VPs as a mandatory part of an early clinical rotation in rheumatology. Using the qualitative approach of phenomenology, we interviewed these students and then analysed data regarding their experiences of VPs as a learning activity. The result shows that students perceived VP activities in relation to actual patients, the clinical context and other learning activities. The VPs represented typical clinical cases which encouraged clinical reasoning and allowed for decision making. The students experienced the activities as integrating biomedical knowledge and clinical experience, providing structure that prepared for the unstructured clinical environment and patient encounters under unstressful conditions. However, the VPs were experienced as lacking the emotional interactivity and complexity of actual patients. Theoretical frameworks of clinical reasoning and experiential learning are suggested as foundations for further educational integration of VPs in the clinical environment. VP activities during clinical rotations provide experiences of clinical reality and allow students to solve problems actively. These features are dependent on VP technology but are also contingent on the surrounding environment.


Assuntos
Competência Clínica , Instrução por Computador/instrumentação , Educação Médica Continuada/métodos , Aprendizagem , Estudantes de Medicina , Interface Usuário-Computador , Instrução por Computador/métodos , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Resolução de Problemas , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Percepção Social
18.
Med Teach ; 33(8): e423-8, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21774638

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Mentor programmes are becoming increasingly common in undergraduate education. However, the meaning attached to being a mentor varies significantly. AIM: The aim of this study is to explore how teachers in medical and dental education understand their role as mentors. METHOD: Twenty mentors in two different mentor programmes for undergraduate medical and dental students were interviewed. The transcripts were analysed using a phenomenographic approach. RESULTS: The findings comprise three qualitatively different ways of understanding what it means to be a mentor, which are described as: (1) a mentor is someone who can answer questions and give advice, (2) a mentor is someone who shares what it means to be a doctor/dentist, and (3) a mentor is someone who listens and stimulates reflection. The way the mentors understood their role also affected what they did as mentors, their relationships with their mentees and their perceived benefits as mentors. CONCLUSIONS: Being a mentor can be perceived in qualitatively different ways also within the same mentor programme. This understanding affects the mentors' actions, their relationships with their mentees and their perceived benefits of being a mentor. Awareness of one's own understanding is important in improving practices and the findings of this study can be used by mentors, teachers and educational developers to facilitate improved effectiveness in mentor programmes, both for mentors and mentees.


Assuntos
Educação em Odontologia/métodos , Educação de Graduação em Medicina/métodos , Mentores , Estudantes de Odontologia/psicologia , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Ensino/métodos , Adulto , Competência Clínica , Docentes de Medicina , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa
19.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 15(2): 153-65, 2010 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19551482

RESUMO

The experience of clinical teachers as well as research results about senior medical students' understanding of basic science concepts has much been debated. To gain a better understanding about how this knowledge-transformation is managed by medical students, this work aims at investigating their ways of setting about learning anatomy. Second-year medical students were interviewed with a focus on their approach to learning and their way of organizing their studies in anatomy. Phenomenographic analysis of the interviews was performed in 2007 to explore the complex field of learning anatomy. Subjects were found to hold conceptions of a dual notion of the field of anatomy and the interplay between details and wholes permeated their ways of studying with an obvious endeavor of understanding anatomy in terms of connectedness and meaning. The students' ways of approaching the learning task was characterized by three categories of description; the subjects experienced their anatomy studies as memorizing, contextualizing or experiencing. The study reveals aspects of learning anatomy indicating a deficit in meaningfulness. Variation in approach to learning and contextualization of anatomy are suggested as key-elements in how the students arrive at understanding. This should be acknowledged through careful variation of the integration of anatomy in future design of medical curricula.


Assuntos
Anatomia/educação , Educação de Graduação em Medicina/métodos , Aprendizagem , Humanos
20.
Med Teach ; 32(7): 562-8, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20653378

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Virtual patients (VPs), high-fidelity simulators and standardized patients are powerful educational interventions leading to effective learning and supporting knowledge retention. AIM: This study explored the variations in retention with VP versus regular learning activities. METHOD: We conducted a randomized controlled study on early and delayed assessment results of 49 students using VP for learning and examination of haematology and cardiology topics in an Internal Medicine course, by means of a 0-10 scoring rubric. RESULTS: The mean difference for early assessment with VP (study--control mean score) was 1.43 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.96, 1.91; p<0.001) for haematology and 1.34 (95% CI 0.93, 1.76; p<0.001) for cardiology. In regular exams, the mean score difference was 2.21 (95% CI 1.3, 3.1; p<0.001) and 1.52 (95% CI 0.76, 2.28; p<0.001), respectively. With delayed assessments, the difference in mean score for Web-SP was 1.48 (95% CI 1.09, 1.86; p<0.001), haematology and 1.16 (95% CI 0.74, 1.58; p<0.001), cardiology; for regular exams the figures were 1.96 (95% CI 0.93, 2.98; p<0.001) and 1.74 (95% CI 0.89, 2.58; p<0.001). The effect size ranged from 0.5 to 0.8. CONCLUSION: Our results indicate better retention with VP than with traditional learning methods.


Assuntos
Simulação por Computador , Educação Médica/métodos , Medicina Interna/educação , Retenção Psicológica , Doenças Cardiovasculares/diagnóstico , Doenças Cardiovasculares/terapia , Educação Médica/normas , Feminino , Doenças Hematológicas/diagnóstico , Doenças Hematológicas/terapia , Humanos , Medicina Interna/métodos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
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