Department of Emergency Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Medical Education, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Med Educ. 2018 Feb;52(2):182-191. doi: 10.1111/medu.13461. Epub 2017 Oct 18.
Increased emphasis is being placed worldwide on accreditation of undergraduate medical education programmes, and costs of participation in accreditation continue to rise. The primary purposes of accreditation are to ensure the quality of medical education and to promote quality improvement. Student performance data as indicators of the impact of accreditation have important limitations. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of accreditation using an innovative marker: the processes implemented at medical schools as a result of accreditation. This conceptual model suggests that accreditation drives medical schools to implement and strengthen processes that support quality in medical education.
In this qualitative study, conducted in 2015-2016, interviews and focus group discussions with deans, undergraduate medical education deans and faculty leaders at 13 of the 17 Canadian medical schools were used to elicit perspectives about processes influenced by accreditation; the method of constant comparative analysis associated with grounded theory was used to generate themes of processes. Perceived negative consequences of accreditation on medical education programmes were also explored.
Nine themes representing processes reported as resulting from accreditation were identified. These processes related to: (i) governance, (ii) data collection and analysis, (iii) monitoring, (iv) documentation, (v) creation and revision of policies and procedures, (vi) continuous quality improvement, (vii) faculty members' engagement, (viii) academic accountability and (ix) curriculum reforms. Themes representing negative consequences of accreditation included (i) costs, (ii) staff and faculty members' morale and feelings, (iii) school reputation and (iv) standards. The identified processes, given their nature, appear likely to be associated with improvement of quality in medical education. These results help justify the costs associated with accreditation.
This study uses an innovative marker, medical schools' processes, to evaluate the impact of accreditation. Results provide evidence that accreditation-related activities steer medical education programmes towards establishment of processes likely to be associated with improved quality in medical education.
全球越来越重视本科医学教育课程的认证,参与认证的成本继续上升。认证的主要目的是确保医学教育的质量,并促进质量改进。学生表现数据作为认证影响的指标有重要的局限性。本研究的目的是使用一种创新的标记物来评估认证的影响:医学院校因认证而实施的过程。这个概念模型表明,认证促使医学院校实施和加强支持医学教育质量的过程。
在 2015-2016 年进行的这项定性研究中,对 17 所加拿大医学院校中的 13 所的院长、本科医学教育院长和教师领导进行了访谈和焦点小组讨论,以了解受认证影响的过程的观点;与扎根理论相关的恒定比较分析方法用于生成过程主题。还探讨了认证对医学教育项目的负面影响。
确定了 9 个代表认证所产生的过程的主题。这些过程涉及:(i)治理,(ii)数据收集和分析,(iii)监测,(iv)文件编制,(v)政策和程序的制定和修订,(vi)持续质量改进,(vii)教师参与,(viii)学术问责制和(ix)课程改革。代表认证负面影响的主题包括(i)成本,(ii)员工和教师的士气和感受,(iii)学校声誉和(iv)标准。鉴于这些过程的性质,它们似乎很可能与医学教育质量的提高有关。这些结果有助于证明与认证相关的成本是合理的。
本研究使用一种创新的标记物,即医学院校的过程,来评估认证的影响。结果提供了证据,证明与认证相关的活动引导医学教育计划建立可能与提高医学教育质量相关的过程。