Carney P A, Dietrich A J, Eliassen S, Pipas C, Donahue D
Department of Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH, USA.
Fam Med. 2000 Oct;32(9):618-23.
Important differences exist in traditional medical education by gender of the teachers and learners. Much less is known about how gender influences educational experiences in community-based ambulatory settings. In this study, we explored how community-based teaching and learning varies by gender of the students and preceptors.
This prospective study used both paper- and computer-based documentation systems to collect information on student-patient-preceptor encounters. A consecutive sample of third-year medical students contributed data on one full clinical day each week as they rotated through a required 8-week family medicine clerkship. The main measures of interest included patient age and gender, health care visit type (acute, acute exacerbation of chronic, chronic, and health maintenance), method of learning in history taking and physical examinations (observing preceptor, being observed by preceptor, performing unobserved, or working jointly with preceptor), content of physical examinations, amount of preceptor feedback, preceptor teaching content, and gender of the students and their preceptors.
Ninety-three students contributed data on 5,017 patient encounters. The distribution of encounters by student-preceptor dyad included: 1,926 (38%) female students with male preceptors. 1,716 (34%) male students with male preceptors, 841 (17%) female students with female preceptors, and 534 (11%) male students with female preceptors. We found that female preceptors conduct more complete physical exams with students than do male preceptors (28% versus 23%). Female students with male preceptors devoted more encounters to observation only than any other dyad (20% versus 12%), and female preceptors are more likely than male preceptors to allow students to perform unobserved (70% versus 59%). Patient gender played little if any role in how students and their preceptors worked together.
Differences of potential importance were found in teaching and learning by gender of the student-preceptor dyad. This factor can and should be considered when determining how students can best meet educational objectives in community-based ambulatory settings.
传统医学教育在教师和学习者性别方面存在重要差异。关于性别如何影响社区门诊环境中的教育体验,人们了解得更少。在本研究中,我们探讨了基于社区的教学和学习如何因学生和带教教师的性别而有所不同。
这项前瞻性研究使用纸质和基于计算机的文档系统来收集关于学生 - 患者 - 带教教师互动的信息。连续抽取的三年级医学生在为期8周的家庭医学实习轮转期间,每周提供一个完整临床日的数据。主要关注的指标包括患者年龄和性别、医疗就诊类型(急性、慢性疾病急性加重、慢性疾病以及健康维护)、病史采集和体格检查的学习方法(观察带教教师、被带教教师观察、独立进行、或与带教教师共同进行)、体格检查内容、带教教师反馈量、带教教师教学内容以及学生和带教教师的性别。
93名学生提供了5017次患者诊疗的数据。学生 - 带教教师配对的诊疗分布情况如下:1926次(38%)为女学生与男带教教师,1716次(34%)为男学生与男带教教师,841次(17%)为女学生与女带教教师,534次(11%)为男学生与女带教教师。我们发现,女带教教师比男带教教师与学生进行的体格检查更完整(28%对23%)。与男带教教师配对的女学生仅用于观察的诊疗次数比其他任何配对都多(20%对12%),并且女带教教师比男带教教师更有可能让学生独立进行操作(70%对59%)。患者性别在学生与其带教教师的合作方式中几乎没有起到任何作用。
在学生 - 带教教师配对的教学和学习中发现了可能具有重要意义的差异。在确定学生如何能在社区门诊环境中最佳地实现教育目标时,这个因素能够且应该被考虑在内。