Sarti Aimee J, Sutherland Stephanie, Landriault Angele, DesRosier Kirk, Brien Susan, Cardinal Pierre
Department of Critical Care Medicine, The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Canada.
Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, Practice, Performance and Innovation Unit, Ottawa, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2017 Jun 23;7(6):e014303. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014303.
Conceptual clarity on physician volunteer engagement is lacking in the medical literature. The aim of this study was to present a conceptual framework to describe the elements which influence physician volunteer engagement and to explore volunteer engagement within a national educational programme.
The context for this study was the Acute Critical Events Simulation (ACES) programme in Canada, which has successfully evolved into a national educational programme, driven by physician volunteers. From 2010 to 2014, the programme recruited 73 volunteer healthcare professionals who contributed to the creation of educational materials and/or served as instructors.
A conceptual framework was constructed based on an extensive literature review and expert consultation. Secondary qualitative analysis was undertaken on 15 semistructured interviews conducted from 2012 to 2013 with programme directors and healthcare professionals across Canada. An additional 15 interviews were conducted in 2015 with physician volunteers to achieve thematic saturation. Data were analysed iteratively and inductive coding techniques applied.
From the physician volunteer data, 11 themes emerged. The most prominent themes included volunteer recruitment, retention, exchange, recognition, educator network and quasi-volunteerism. Captured within these interrelated themes were the framework elements, including the synergistic effects of emotional, cognitive and reciprocal engagement. Behavioural engagement was driven by these factors along with a cue to action, which led to contributions to the ACES programme.
This investigation provides a preliminary framework and supportive evidence towards understanding the complex construct of physician volunteer engagement. The need for this research is particularly important in present day, where growing fiscal constraints create challenges for medical education to do more with less.
医学文献中缺乏关于医生志愿者参与的清晰概念。本研究的目的是提出一个概念框架,以描述影响医生志愿者参与的因素,并在一个全国性教育项目中探索志愿者参与情况。
本研究的背景是加拿大的急性危急事件模拟(ACES)项目,该项目在医生志愿者的推动下已成功发展成为一个全国性教育项目。2010年至2014年,该项目招募了73名志愿者医疗专业人员,他们参与了教育材料的创建和/或担任教员。
基于广泛的文献综述和专家咨询构建了一个概念框架。对2012年至2013年期间与加拿大各地项目主任和医疗专业人员进行的15次半结构化访谈进行了二次定性分析。2015年又对医生志愿者进行了15次访谈,以实现主题饱和。对数据进行反复分析并应用归纳编码技术。
从医生志愿者数据中出现了11个主题。最突出的主题包括志愿者招募、保留、交流、认可、教育者网络和准志愿性。这些相互关联的主题中包含了框架要素,包括情感、认知和互惠参与的协同效应。行为参与由这些因素以及行动提示驱动,从而为ACES项目做出贡献。
本调查为理解医生志愿者参与的复杂结构提供了一个初步框架和支持性证据。在当前财政限制日益增加,给医学教育带来用更少资源做更多事情的挑战的情况下,这项研究的必要性尤为重要。