Wasson Lauren T, Cusmano Amberle, Meli Laura, Louh Irene, Falzon Louise, Hampsey Meghan, Young Geoffrey, Shaffer Jonathan, Davidson Karina W
Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York.
George Washington University, Washington, DC.
JAMA. 2016 Dec 6;316(21):2237-2252. doi: 10.1001/jama.2016.17573.
Concerns exist about the current quality of undergraduate medical education and its effect on students' well-being.
To identify best practices for undergraduate medical education learning environment interventions that are associated with improved emotional well-being of students.
Learning environment interventions were identified by searching the biomedical electronic databases Ovid MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, and ERIC from database inception dates to October 2016. Studies examined any intervention designed to promote medical students' emotional well-being in the setting of a US academic medical school, with an outcome defined as students' reports of well-being as assessed by surveys, semistructured interviews, or other quantitative methods.
Two investigators independently reviewed abstracts and full-text articles. Data were extracted into tables to summarize results. Study quality was assessed by the Medical Education Research Study Quality Instrument (MERQSI), which has a possible range of 5 to 18; higher scores indicate higher design and methods quality and a score of 14 or higher indicates a high-quality study.
Twenty-eight articles including at least 8224 participants met eligibility criteria. Study designs included single-group cross-sectional or posttest only (n = 10), single-group pretest/posttest (n = 2), nonrandomized 2-group (n = 13), and randomized clinical trial (n = 3); 89.2% were conducted at a single site, and the mean MERSQI score for all studies was 10.3 (SD, 2.11; range, 5-13). Studies encompassed a variety of interventions, including those focused on pass/fail grading systems (n = 3; mean MERSQI score, 12.0), mental health programs (n = 4; mean MERSQI score, 11.9), mind-body skills programs (n = 7; mean MERSQI score, 11.3), curriculum structure (n = 3; mean MERSQI score, 9.5), multicomponent program reform (n = 5; mean MERSQI score, 9.4), wellness programs (n = 4; mean MERSQI score, 9.0), and advising/mentoring programs (n = 3; mean MERSQI score, 8.2).
In this systematic review, limited evidence suggested that some specific learning environment interventions were associated with improved emotional well-being among medical students. However, the overall quality of the evidence was low, highlighting the need for high-quality medical education research.
人们对当前本科医学教育的质量及其对学生幸福感的影响存在担忧。
确定本科医学教育学习环境干预的最佳实践,这些干预与学生情绪幸福感的改善相关。
通过检索生物医学电子数据库Ovid MEDLINE、EMBASE、Cochrane图书馆和ERIC,从数据库起始日期至2016年10月,确定学习环境干预措施。研究考察了在美国学术医学院背景下旨在促进医学生情绪幸福感的任何干预措施,结果定义为通过调查、半结构化访谈或其他定量方法评估的学生幸福感报告。
两名研究人员独立审查摘要和全文文章。数据被提取到表格中以总结结果。研究质量通过医学教育研究研究质量工具(MERQSI)进行评估,该工具的可能范围为5至18分;分数越高表明设计和方法质量越高,14分或更高表明高质量研究。
28篇文章(包括至少8224名参与者)符合纳入标准。研究设计包括单组横断面或仅后测(n = 10)、单组前测/后测(n = 2)、非随机两组(n = 13)和随机临床试验(n = 3);89.2%在单一地点进行,所有研究的平均MERQSI评分为10.3(标准差,2.11;范围,5 - 13)。研究涵盖了各种干预措施,包括那些侧重于通过/不及格评分系统的措施(n = 3;平均MERQSI评分,12.0)、心理健康项目(n = 4;平均MERQSI评分,11.9)、身心技能项目(n = 7;平均MERQSI评分,11.3)、课程结构(n = 3;平均MERQSI评分,9.5)、多成分项目改革(n = 5;平均MERQSI评分,9.4)、健康项目(n = 4;平均MERQSI评分,9.0)以及咨询/指导项目(n = 3;平均MERQSI评分,8.2)。
在这项系统评价中,有限的证据表明一些特定的学习环境干预与医学生情绪幸福感的改善相关。然而,证据的总体质量较低,突出了高质量医学教育研究的必要性。