De Sumit K, Henke Peter K, Ailawadi Gorav, Dimick Justin B, Colletti Lisa M
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2004 Dec;199(6):932-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2004.08.025.
There has been declining interest in surgery among medical students and one reason might be the third-year clerkship experience. The aim of this study was to clarify the perceptions and expectations of attendings, residents, and medical students on the clerkship experience.
A survey was distributed to all general surgery attendings, the entire general surgery house staff, and an entire third year medical school class inclusive of the 2001-2002 academic year at a single institution. Statistic analysis consisted of chi-square and Kruskal-Wallis-ANOVA on ranks with Dunn's test for multiple comparisons. A p < 0.05 was significant.
Responses were obtained from 59 attending surgeons (50%), 38 surgical residents (32%), and 107 medical students (66%). Of this student cohort, 35% were planning to choose a surgical specialty as a career. Agreement was high among faculty, students, and residents about factors considered important in evaluation, expectations of skills, and level of skills needed before the clerkship. Medical students desired more hours of instruction, believed they performed fewer procedures per week, and thought that feedback was poor compared with the opinions of faculty and residents (p < 0.002). Nearly 50% of medical students believed they were an inconvenience to the service; 30% of house officers and 27% of faculty (p < 0.001) believed this also. Almost all faculty and residents, however, wanted medical students on the service (> 95%). Faculty believed residents did a better job teaching than either the students or residents themselves did (p < 0.001), and students thought that residents were the primary source of education in patient care.
Considerable differences exist between faculty, surgical resident, and medical student perceptions and expectations of medical student education. Structured direct faculty contact, definition of medical student roles on the surgical team, and more consistent feedback can be rapidly improved.
医学生对外科手术的兴趣一直在下降,其中一个原因可能是三年级的临床实习经历。本研究的目的是阐明主治医生、住院医师和医学生对临床实习经历的看法和期望。
对一所机构2001 - 2002学年的所有普通外科主治医生、全体普通外科住院医师以及整个三年级医学生班级进行了一项调查。统计分析包括卡方检验和秩和检验(Kruskal - Wallis - ANOVA)以及用于多重比较的邓恩检验。p < 0.05具有统计学意义。
共获得59名主治外科医生(50%)、38名外科住院医师(32%)和107名医学生(66%)的回复。在这个学生群体中,35%计划选择外科专业作为职业。在教师、学生和住院医师之间,对于评估中重要因素、技能期望以及临床实习前所需技能水平的看法高度一致。医学生希望获得更多小时的指导,认为他们每周进行的操作较少,并且认为与教师和住院医师的看法相比,反馈较差(p < 0.002)。近50%的医学生认为他们给科室带来了不便;30%的住院医生和27%的教师也这样认为(p < 0.001)。然而,几乎所有教师和住院医师都希望医学生参与科室工作(> 95%)。教师认为住院医师在教学方面比学生或住院医师自己做得更好(p < 0.001),而学生认为住院医师是患者护理教育的主要来源。
教师、外科住院医师和医学生对医学生教育的看法和期望存在相当大的差异。结构化的直接教师接触、明确医学生在外科团队中的角色以及更一致的反馈可以迅速得到改善。