Medicine and Public Health Sciences and Associate Dean for Health Systems Education, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Penn State Hershey Medical Center - HO34, 500 University Drive Hershey, Hershey, PA, 17033, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2018 Nov 1;18(1):248. doi: 10.1186/s12909-018-1345-5.
Medical schools have a critical need to develop roles for students that are "value-added," defined as "…experiential roles that can positively impact health outcomes while also enhancing student knowledge, attitudes, and skills in Clinical or Health Systems Science." Following implementation of value-added clinical systems learning roles for all first-year students, authors investigated student perceptions of the educational value from these patient-centered experiences.
Between 2014 and 16, authors collected logs from students following their working with patients; authors also performed six, 1:1 student interviews, which were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Authors used thematic analysis to explore students' perceptions of the experience and educational benefits from these roles. Authors identified themes, and agreed upon results and quotations.
A total of 792 logs from 363 patients and six interviews were completed and analyzed. Students reported six educational benefits of performing value-added clinical systems learning roles in the health system, including enhanced understanding of and appreciation for a patient's perspective on health care and his/her health, barriers and social determinants of health, health care systems and delivery, interprofessional collaboration and teamwork, clinical medicine, and approach to communicating with patients.
Students' reported educational benefits from value-added clinical systems learning roles span several learning areas that align with clinical and Health Systems Science, i.e. the needs of future physicians. These roles have the potential to shift learning from the physician-centric identity to one more fully aligned with patient-centered, team-based providers, while also potentially improving health today.
医学院校急需为学生开发“增值”角色,即“……能够对健康结果产生积极影响,同时增强学生在临床或健康系统科学方面的知识、态度和技能的体验式角色”。在为所有一年级学生实施增值临床系统学习角色后,作者调查了学生对这些以患者为中心的体验的教育价值的看法。
在 2014 年至 2016 年期间,作者从学生与患者合作后收集日志;作者还进行了六次 1:1 的学生访谈,这些访谈被录音并逐字转录。作者使用主题分析来探索学生对这些角色的体验和教育收益的看法。作者确定了主题,并就结果和引语达成一致。
共完成并分析了来自 363 名患者的 792 份日志和六次访谈。学生报告了在卫生系统中执行增值临床系统学习角色的六个教育收益,包括增强对患者对医疗保健和他/她的健康、健康障碍和社会决定因素、医疗保健系统和交付、跨专业合作和团队合作、临床医学以及与患者沟通的方法的看法和欣赏。
学生从增值临床系统学习角色中报告的教育收益涵盖了与临床和健康系统科学相关的几个学习领域,即未来医生的需求。这些角色有可能将学习从以医生为中心的身份转变为更完全符合以患者为中心、以团队为基础的提供者的身份,同时也有可能改善今天的健康状况。