Department of Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
Med Educ. 2012 Dec;46(12):1194-205. doi: 10.1111/medu.12017.
The development of professional competence is the main goal of residency training. Clinical supervision is the most commonly used teaching and learning method for the development of core competencies (CCs). The literature provides little information on how to encourage the learning of CCs through supervision. We undertook an exploratory study to describe if and how CCs were addressed during supervision in a family medicine residency programme.
We selected a participatory action research design to engage participants in exploring their precepting practices. Eleven volunteer faculty staff and six residents from a large family medicine residency programme took part in a 9-month process which included three focus group encounters alternating with data gathering during supervision. We used mostly qualitative methods for data collection and analysis, with thematic content analysis, triangulation of sources and of researchers, and member checking.
Participants realised that they addressed all CCs listed as programme outcomes during clinical supervision, albeit implicitly and intuitively, and often unconsciously and superficially. We identified a series of factors that influenced the discussion of CCs: (i) CCs must be both known and valued; (ii) discussion of CCs occurs in a constant adaptation to numerous contextual factors, such as residents' characteristics; (iii) the teaching and learning of CCs is influenced by six challenges in the preceptor-resident interaction, such as residents' active engagement, and (iv) coherence with other curricular elements contributes to learning about CCs. Differences between residents' and preceptors' perspectives are discussed.
This is the first descriptive study focusing on the teaching of CCs during clinical supervision, as experienced in a family medicine residency programme. Content and process issues were equally influential on the discussion of CCs. Our findings led to a representation of factors determining the teaching and learning of CCs in supervision, and suggest directions for research, for faculty development, and for interventions with learners.
专业能力的发展是住院医师培训的主要目标。临床监督是发展核心能力(CCs)最常用的教学和学习方法。文献对于如何通过监督鼓励 CCs 的学习提供的信息很少。我们进行了一项探索性研究,以描述在家庭医学住院医师培训计划中监督过程中是否以及如何解决 CCs。
我们选择了参与式行动研究设计,让参与者参与探索他们的指导实践。来自一个大型家庭医学住院医师培训计划的 11 名志愿教师和 6 名住院医师参加了为期 9 个月的过程,其中包括三次焦点小组讨论,同时在监督过程中进行数据收集。我们主要使用定性方法进行数据收集和分析,采用主题内容分析、来源和研究人员的三角测量以及成员检查。
参与者意识到他们在临床监督过程中讨论了所有列为计划结果的 CCs,尽管是隐含的、直观的,而且常常是无意识和肤浅的。我们确定了一系列影响 CCs 讨论的因素:(i)CCs 必须是已知的和有价值的;(ii)CCs 的讨论是在不断适应众多背景因素的情况下进行的,例如居民的特点;(iii)CCs 的教学和学习受到指导教师与居民互动中的六个挑战的影响,例如居民的积极参与,以及(iv)与其他课程要素的一致性有助于学习 CCs。讨论了居民和指导教师观点之间的差异。
这是第一项关于在家庭医学住院医师培训计划中临床监督过程中 CCs 教学的描述性研究。内容和过程问题对 CCs 的讨论同样有影响。我们的研究结果导致了确定监督中 CCs 教学和学习的因素的表示,并为教师发展和干预学习者提供了研究、方向。