Park Sophie, Khan Nada F, Hampshire Mandy, Knox Richard, Malpass Alice, Thomas James, Anagnostelis Betsy, Newman Mark, Bower Peter, Rosenthal Joe, Murray Elizabeth, Iliffe Steve, Heneghan Carl, Band Amanda, Georgieva Zoya
a UCL Medical School , UK.
b University of Nottingham , UK.
Med Teach. 2015 Jul;37(7):611-630. doi: 10.3109/0142159X.2015.1032918. Epub 2015 May 6.
General practice is increasingly used as a learning environment in undergraduate medical education in the UK.
The aim of this project was to identify, summarise and synthesise research about undergraduate medical education in general practice in the UK.
We systematically identified studies of undergraduate medical education within a general practice setting in the UK from 1990 onwards. All papers were summarised in a descriptive report and categorised into two in-depth syntheses: a quantitative and a qualitative in-depth review.
169 papers were identified, representing research from 26 UK medical schools. The in-depth review of quantitative papers (n = 7) showed that medical students learned clinical skills as well or better in general practice settings. Students receive more teaching, and clerk and examine more patients in the general practice setting than in hospital. Patient satisfaction and enablement are similar whether a student is present or not in a consultation, however, patients experience lower relational empathy. Two main thematic groups emerged from the qualitative in-depth review (n = 10): the interpersonal interactions within the teaching consultation and the socio-cultural spaces of learning which shape these interactions. The GP has a role as a broker of the interactions between patients and students. General practice is a socio-cultural and developmental learning space for students, who need to negotiate the competing cultures between hospital and general practice. Lastly, patients are transient members of the learning community, and their role requires careful facilitation.
General practice is as good, if not better, than hospital delivery of teaching of clinical skills. Our meta-ethnography has produced rich understandings of the complex relationships shaping possibilities for student and patient active participation in learning.
在英国,全科医疗越来越多地被用作本科医学教育的学习环境。
本项目的目的是识别、总结和综合关于英国全科医疗中本科医学教育的研究。
我们系统地识别了1990年起在英国全科医疗环境下的本科医学教育研究。所有论文都在一份描述性报告中进行了总结,并分为两个深入的综合报告:定量深入综述和定性深入综述。
共识别出169篇论文,代表了英国26所医学院校的研究。对定量论文(n = 7)的深入综述表明,医学生在全科医疗环境中学习临床技能的效果相同或更好。在全科医疗环境中,学生接受的教学更多,接待和检查的患者比在医院更多。无论咨询时学生是否在场,患者满意度和赋权情况相似,然而,患者感受到的关系同理心较低。定性深入综述(n = 10)产生了两个主要主题组:教学咨询中的人际互动以及塑造这些互动的社会文化学习空间。全科医生在患者与学生之间的互动中起到中介作用。全科医疗对学生来说是一个社会文化和发展性的学习空间,学生需要在医院和全科医疗之间相互竞争的文化中进行协调。最后,患者是学习社区的临时成员,需要谨慎促进他们所扮演的角色。
全科医疗在临床技能教学方面即便不比医院更好,也与医院相当。我们的元民族志对塑造学生和患者积极参与学习可能性的复杂关系有了丰富的理解。