Hoonpongsimanont Wirachin, Sahota Preet K, Chen Yanjun, Patel Mayuri, Tarapan Tanawat, Bengiamin Deena, Sutham Krongkarn, Imsuwan Intanon, Dadeh Ar-Aishah, Nakornchai Tanyaporn, Narajeenron Khuansiri
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine, Orange, CA, USA.
Institute for Clinical and Translational Sciences, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.
Int J Med Educ. 2018 Sep 28;9:246-252. doi: 10.5116/ijme.5ba0.a584.
The primary objective of this study was to determine whether consensuses on the definition of emergency physician professionalism exist within and among four different generations. Our secondary objective was to describe the most important characteristic related to emergency physician professionalism that each generation values.
We performed a cross-sectional survey study, using a card-sorting technique, at the emergency departments of two university-based medical centers in the United States. The study was conducted with 288 participants from February to November 2017. Participants included adult emergency department patients, emergency medicine supervising physicians, emergency medicine residents, emergency department nurses, and fourth- and second-year medical students who independently ranked 39 cards that represent qualities related to emergency physician professionalism. We used descriptive statistics, quantitative cultural consensuses and Spearman's correlation coefficients to analyze the data.
We found cultural consensuses on emergency physician professionalism in Millennials and Generation X overall, with respect for patients named the most important quality (eigenratio 5.94, negative competency 0%; eigenratio 3.87, negative competency 1.64%, respectively). There were consensuses on emergency physician professionalism in healthcare providers throughout all generations, but no consensuses were found across generations in the patient groups.
While younger generations and healthcare providers had consensuses on emergency physician professionalism, we found that patients had no consensuses on this matter. Medical professionalism curricula should be designed with an understanding of each generation's values concerning professionalism. Future studies using qualitative methods across specialties, to assess definitions of medical professionalism in each generation, should be pursued.
本研究的主要目的是确定四代不同人群内部以及他们之间对于急诊医生职业素养的定义是否存在共识。我们的次要目的是描述每代人所重视的与急诊医生职业素养相关的最重要特征。
我们在美国两所大学医学中心的急诊科采用卡片分类技术进行了一项横断面调查研究。该研究于2017年2月至11月对288名参与者进行。参与者包括成年急诊科患者、急诊医学主治医师、急诊医学住院医师、急诊科护士以及四年级和二年级医学生,他们独立对代表急诊医生职业素养相关特质的39张卡片进行排序。我们使用描述性统计、定量文化共识和斯皮尔曼相关系数来分析数据。
我们发现千禧一代和X一代总体上对急诊医生职业素养存在文化共识,尊重患者被认为是最重要的特质(特征比率分别为5.94和3.87,负能力分别为0%和1.64%)。各代医疗服务提供者对急诊医生职业素养存在共识,但患者群体各代之间未达成共识。
虽然年轻一代和医疗服务提供者对急诊医生职业素养存在共识,但我们发现患者对此没有达成共识。医学职业素养课程的设计应了解每代人对职业素养的价值观。未来应采用定性方法跨专业进行研究,以评估每代人对医学职业素养的定义。