Jauregui Joshua, Gatewood Medley O, Ilgen Jonathan S, Schaninger Caitlin, Strote Jared
University of Washington, Department of Emergency Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
University of Cincinnati, Department of Emergency Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio.
West J Emerg Med. 2016 May;17(3):355-61. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2016.2.29102. Epub 2016 May 2.
Medical professionalism is a core competency for emergency medicine (EM) trainees; but defining professionalism remains challenging, leading to difficulties creating objectives and performing assessment. Because professionalism is dynamic, culture-specific, and often taught by modeling, an exploration of trainees' perceptions can highlight their educational baseline and elucidate the importance they place on general conventional professionalism domains. To this end, our objective was to assess the relative value EM residents place on traditional components of professionalism.
We performed a cross-sectional, multi-institutional survey of incoming and graduating EM residents at four programs. The survey was developed using the American Board of Internal Medicine's "Project Professionalism" and the Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education definition of professionalism competency. We identified 27 attributes within seven domains: clinical excellence, humanism, accountability, altruism, duty and service, honor and integrity, and respect for others. Residents were asked to rate each attribute on a 10-point scale. We analyzed data to assess variance across attributes as well as differences between residents at different training levels or different institutions.
Of the 114 residents eligible, 100 (88%) completed the survey. The relative value assigned to different professional attributes varied considerably, with those in the altruism domain valued significantly lower and those in the "respect for others" and "honor and integrity" valued significantly higher (p<0.001). Significant differences were found between interns and seniors for five attributes primarily in the "duty and service" domain (p<0.05). Among different residencies, significant differences were found with attributes within the "altruism" and "duty and service" domains (p<0.05).
Residents perceive differences in the relative importance of traditionally defined professional attributes and this may be useful to educators. Explanations for these differences are hypothesized, as are the potential implications for professionalism education. Because teaching professional behavior is taught most effectively via behavior modeling, faculty awareness of resident values and faculty development to address potential gaps may improve professionalism education.
医学职业素养是急诊医学(EM)实习生的一项核心能力;但对职业素养进行定义仍具有挑战性,这导致在制定目标和进行评估时存在困难。由于职业素养具有动态性、文化特异性,且通常通过榜样示范来传授,因此探索实习生的认知可以突出他们的教育基线,并阐明他们对一般传统职业素养领域的重视程度。为此,我们的目标是评估急诊医学住院医师对职业素养传统组成部分的相对重视程度。
我们对四个项目中即将入职和即将毕业的急诊医学住院医师进行了一项多机构横断面调查。该调查是根据美国内科医学委员会的“职业素养项目”以及毕业后医学教育认证委员会对职业素养能力的定义制定的。我们在七个领域中确定了27个属性:临床卓越、人文关怀、问责制、利他主义、职责与服务、荣誉与正直以及尊重他人。要求住院医师以10分制对每个属性进行评分。我们分析数据以评估各属性之间的差异以及不同培训水平或不同机构的住院医师之间的差异。
在114名符合条件的住院医师中,100名(88%)完成了调查。不同职业属性的相对重视程度差异很大,利他主义领域的属性得分显著较低,而“尊重他人”和“荣誉与正直”领域的属性得分显著较高(p<0.001)。实习生和高年级住院医师在五个属性上存在显著差异,主要集中在“职责与服务”领域(p<0.05)。在不同的住院医师培训项目中,“利他主义”和“职责与服务”领域的属性存在显著差异(p<0.05)。
住院医师认识到传统定义的职业属性的相对重要性存在差异,这对教育工作者可能有用。对这些差异的解释以及对职业素养教育的潜在影响进行了假设。由于通过行为示范来教授职业行为最为有效,教师对住院医师价值观的认识以及为弥补潜在差距而进行的教师发展可能会改善职业素养教育。