Voyer Stéphane, Cuncic Cary, Butler Deborah L, MacNeil Kimberley, Watling Christopher, Hatala Rose
Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Med Educ. 2016 Sep;50(9):943-54. doi: 10.1111/medu.13067.
We developed, implemented and evaluated an evidence-based programme of feedback designed to address limitations identified in the current literature.
We sought to advance understanding about how and why feedback processes might be more effective in clinical education.
Three faculty members and nine first-year internal medicine residents participated in the pilot programme. To counter challenges identified in the literature, feedback was based on direct observation, grounded in longitudinal faculty-resident relationships, and devoid of summative assessment. We used a qualitative case study design to address three research questions: (i) What benefits did the participants describe? (ii) What elements of the programme facilitated these benefits? (iii) What were the limitations and challenges of the programme? Collected data included audiotapes of interactions between faculty members and residents, field notes written during observations, and semi-structured interviews and focus groups with resident participants. Data analysis moved cyclically and iteratively through inductive and deductive analysis.
Residents described benefits relating to their ways of working (clinical skills), ways of learning (accountability for learning) and ways of feeling (emotional well-being). According to participants, specific elements of the programme that achieved these benefits included the direct observation of authentic clinical work, the longitudinal relationship with a faculty member and the emergence of feedback as a conversation between the faculty member and learner.
We conclude that the conditions established within our pilot feedback programme influenced the learning culture for first-year internal medicine residents by grounding direct observation in authentic clinical work and setting the observations in the context of a longitudinal, non-assessment-based relationship between a faculty member and resident. These conditions appeared to influence residents' participation in the feedback process, their ways of approaching their daily clinical work, their emotional well-being and their engagement in their own learning.
我们制定、实施并评估了一项基于证据的反馈计划,旨在解决当前文献中发现的局限性。
我们试图增进对反馈过程在临床教育中如何以及为何可能更有效的理解。
三名教员和九名内科一年级住院医师参与了该试点计划。为应对文献中确定的挑战,反馈基于直接观察,建立在教员与住院医师的长期关系基础上,且不进行总结性评估。我们采用定性案例研究设计来回答三个研究问题:(i)参与者描述了哪些益处?(ii)该计划的哪些要素促成了这些益处?(iii)该计划的局限性和挑战是什么?收集的数据包括教员与住院医师互动的录音带、观察期间撰写的实地笔记,以及与住院医师参与者进行的半结构化访谈和焦点小组讨论。数据分析通过归纳和演绎分析循环迭代进行。
住院医师描述了与他们的工作方式(临床技能)、学习方式(对学习负责)和感受方式(情绪健康)相关的益处。参与者认为,实现这些益处的该计划的具体要素包括对真实临床工作的直接观察、与教员的长期关系,以及反馈作为教员与学习者之间的对话的出现。
我们得出结论,我们的试点反馈计划中建立的条件通过将直接观察扎根于真实临床工作,并将观察置于教员与住院医师之间基于长期、非评估关系的背景下,影响了内科一年级住院医师的学习文化。这些条件似乎影响了住院医师对反馈过程的参与、他们处理日常临床工作的方式、他们的情绪健康以及他们对自身学习的投入。