Bing-You Robert, Hayes Victoria, Varaklis Kalli, Trowbridge Robert, Kemp Heather, McKelvy Dina
R. Bing-You is professor, Tufts University School of Medicine, and vice president for medical education, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine. V. Hayes is clinical assistant professor, Tufts University School of Medicine, and faculty member, Department of Family Medicine, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine. K. Varaklis is clinical associate professor, Tufts University School of Medicine, and residency program director in obstetrics and gynecology, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine. R. Trowbridge is associate professor, Tufts University School of Medicine, and director of undergraduate medical education, Department of Medicine, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine. H. Kemp is medical librarian, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine. D. McKelvy is manager of library and knowledge services, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine.
Acad Med. 2017 Sep;92(9):1346-1354. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001578.
To conduct a scoping review of the literature on feedback for learners in medical education.
In 2015-2016, the authors searched the Ovid MEDLINE, ERIC, CINAHL, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global, Web of Science, and Scopus databases and seven medical education journals (via OvidSP) for articles published January 1980-December 2015. Two reviewers screened articles for eligibility with inclusion criteria. All authors extracted key data and analyzed data descriptively.
The authors included 650 articles in the review. More than half (n = 341) were published during 2010-2015. Many centered on medical students (n = 274) or residents (n = 192); some included learners from other disciplines (n = 57). Most (n = 633) described methods used for giving feedback; some (n = 95) described opinions and recommendations regarding feedback. Few studies assessed approaches to feedback with randomized, educational trials (n = 49) or described changes in learner behavior after feedback (n = 49). Even fewer assessed the impact of feedback on patient outcomes (n = 28).
Feedback is considered an important means of improving learner performance, as evidenced by the number of articles outlining recommendations for feedback approaches. The literature on feedback for learners in medical education is broad, fairly recent, and generally describes new or altered curricular approaches that involve feedback for learners. High-quality, evidence-based recommendations for feedback are lacking. In addition to highlighting calls to reassess the concepts and complex nature of feedback interactions, the authors identify several areas that require further investigation.
对医学教育中针对学习者的反馈相关文献进行范围综述。
2015 - 2016年,作者检索了Ovid MEDLINE、教育资源信息中心(ERIC)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、ProQuest全球博硕士论文数据库、科学引文索引(Web of Science)以及Scopus数据库,还有七种医学教育期刊(通过OvidSP),以查找1980年1月至2015年12月发表的文章。两名评审员根据纳入标准筛选文章的合格性。所有作者提取关键数据并进行描述性数据分析。
作者在综述中纳入了650篇文章。超过一半(n = 341)发表于2010 - 2015年。许多文章围绕医学生(n = 274)或住院医师(n = 192);一些文章纳入了来自其他学科的学习者(n = 57)。大多数(n = 633)描述了给予反馈所使用的方法;一些(n = 95)描述了关于反馈的意见和建议。很少有研究通过随机教育试验评估反馈方法(n = 49)或描述反馈后学习者行为的变化(n = 49)。评估反馈对患者结局影响的研究更少(n = 28)。
反馈被认为是提高学习者表现的重要手段,概述反馈方法建议的文章数量就证明了这一点。医学教育中针对学习者的反馈相关文献范围广泛,且相当新,总体上描述了涉及对学习者反馈的新的或改变的课程方法。缺乏高质量、基于证据的反馈建议。除了强调重新评估反馈互动的概念和复杂性质的呼声外,作者还确定了几个需要进一步研究的领域。