Centre for Healthcare Education Research and Innovation, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Med Educ. 2019 Oct;53(10):1025-1036. doi: 10.1111/medu.13933.
To earn society's trust, medical students must develop professional values and behaviours via a transformative process, from lay person to doctor. Yet students are expected to epitomise the values and behaviours of a doctor from the outset of medical school, leading them to feel 'judged all the time' (in terms of their professionalism). Our aim, therefore, is to extend knowledge exploring the expectations communicated to and perceived by medical students and to provide a conceptually framed understanding of students' associated emotional tensions.
We used a qualitative exploratory case study methodology within a constructivist paradigm to explore the messages communicated about professionalism and students' perceived expectations of professionalism in one medical school. Data were collected in the form of: (i) regulatory and medical school documents, and (ii) focus groups with 23 participants in their first 2 years at medical school. We used thematic analysis for data interpretation and two theoretical lenses, Amalberti et al.'s framework of system migration for health care and Sinclair's adaptation of Goffman's dramaturgical theory, to critically analyse the results.
We found messages and perceived expectations of knowledge and competence, and the need to ensure trust. We also identified that the expectations of patients, doctors, society, family and friends are just as, if not more, influential than policy and regulatory expectations for early years' medical students. Moreover, we found tensions, with students feeling that the expectations of them from others were unrealistic for their level of training. With this came a sense of pressure to meet expectations that participants responded to by acting as if already competent.
Our findings suggest that external forces (expectations) drive early years' students to act as if competent. Although this is part of student identity formation it could also have implications for patient safety and therefore necessitates recognition and support from educators.
为了赢得社会的信任,医学生必须通过一个从非专业人士到医生的转变过程来发展专业价值观和行为。然而,学生们从医学院一开始就被期望成为医生价值观和行为的典范,这导致他们感到“一直被评判”(就他们的专业性而言)。因此,我们的目的是扩展知识,探索向医学生传达的期望和他们感知到的期望,并提供一个概念框架,理解学生的相关情绪紧张。
我们在建构主义范式内使用定性探索性案例研究方法,来探索一所医学院中关于专业性传达的信息和学生对专业性的感知期望。数据收集的形式是:(一)监管和医学院文件,以及(二)在医学生的前两年进行的 23 名参与者的焦点小组。我们使用主题分析来解释数据,并使用两个理论视角,即 Amalberti 等人的医疗保健系统迁移框架和 Sinclair 对 Goffman 戏剧理论的改编,对结果进行批判性分析。
我们发现了关于知识和能力的信息和感知期望的消息,以及确保信任的必要性。我们还发现,患者、医生、社会、家庭和朋友的期望与政策和监管期望一样,如果不是更有影响力的话,对早期医学生也有影响。此外,我们发现了紧张局势,学生们觉得其他人对他们的期望不切实际,因为他们的培训水平还不够。随之而来的是一种压力感,需要满足期望,参与者通过表现出已经有能力来应对这种期望。
我们的发现表明,外部力量(期望)促使早期学生表现得好像有能力。虽然这是学生身份形成的一部分,但它也可能对患者安全产生影响,因此需要教育者的认可和支持。