Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Med Educ. 2018 Dec;52(12):1271-1287. doi: 10.1111/medu.13714. Epub 2018 Oct 18.
In recent years, point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has become a widely used clinical tool in a number of clinical specialties. In response, POCUS has been incorporated into medical curricula across the learning continuum, bolstered by enthusiastic appraisals of the technology's benefits for learners, clinicians and patients. In this project, we have sought to identify and understand the effects of dominant discourses influencing the integration of POCUS into medical education.
We conducted a Foucauldian critical discourse analysis (CDA) to identify and analyse discourses that legitimise and privilege the use of POCUS in medical education. We assembled an archive of 473 texts published between 1980 and 2017. Each article in the archive was analysed to identify frequently occurring truth statements (expressing concepts whose truths are unquestioned within particular discourses) that we used to characterise the major discourses that construct representations of POCUS in medical education.
We identified three dominant discourses: (i) a visuo-centric discourse prioritising the visual information as truth over other clinical data; (ii) a utilitarian discourse emphasising improvements in patient care; and (iii) a modernist discourse highlighting the current and future needs of clinicians in our technological world. These discourses overlap and converge; the core discursive effect makes the further elevation of POCUS in medical education, and the resulting attenuation of other curricular priorities, appear inevitable.
The three dominant discourses identified in this paper engender ideal conditions for the proliferation of POCUS in medical education through curricular guidelines, surveys of adherence to these guidelines and authoritative position statements. By identifying and analysing these dominant discourses, we can ask questions that do not take for granted the assumed truths underpinning the discourses, highlight potential pitfalls of proposed curricular changes and ensure these changes truly improve medical education.
近年来,即时超声(POCUS)已在多个临床专业中成为广泛使用的临床工具。作为回应,POCUS 已被纳入整个学习过程中的医学课程,该技术对学习者、临床医生和患者的益处得到了热烈的评价。在这个项目中,我们试图确定和理解影响 POCUS 融入医学教育的主要话语的效果。
我们进行了福柯式的批判性话语分析(CDA),以确定和分析使 POCUS 在医学教育中合法化和优先使用的话语。我们汇编了一个由 1980 年至 2017 年期间发表的 473 篇文章组成的档案。档案中的每一篇文章都经过分析,以确定经常出现的真实陈述(表达在特定话语中被视为理所当然的概念),我们用这些陈述来描述构成医学教育中 POCUS 代表性的主要话语。
我们确定了三个主要话语:(i)以视觉为中心的话语,将视觉信息视为比其他临床数据更真实的信息;(ii)功利主义话语,强调改善患者护理;(iii)现代主义话语,强调在我们的技术世界中临床医生的当前和未来需求。这些话语重叠并汇聚;核心话语效果使得 POCUS 在医学教育中的进一步提升,以及其他课程重点的相应减弱,似乎不可避免。
本文确定的三个主要话语通过课程指南、对这些指南的遵守情况的调查以及权威立场声明,为 POCUS 在医学教育中的扩散创造了理想的条件。通过识别和分析这些主要话语,我们可以提出不默认支撑话语的假定真理的问题,突出拟议课程变化的潜在陷阱,并确保这些变化真正改善医学教育。