Keele University School of Medicine, Keele, UK.
Palliative Care Service, Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, St Pancras Hospital, 5th Floor South Wing, 4 St. Pancras Way, London, NW1 0PE, UK.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2020 Oct;25(4):825-843. doi: 10.1007/s10459-020-09959-w. Epub 2020 Jan 20.
Transitioning from student to doctor is notoriously challenging. Newly qualified doctors feel required to make decisions before owning their new identity. It is essential to understand how responsibility relates to identity formation to improve transitions for doctors and patients. This multiphase ethnographic study explores realities of transition through anticipatory, lived and reflective stages. We utilised Labov's narrative framework (Labov in J Narrat Life Hist 7(1-4):395-415, 1997) to conduct in-depth analysis of complex relationships between changes in responsibility and development of professional identity. Our objective was to understand how these concepts interact. Newly qualified doctors acclimatise to their role requirements through participatory experience, perceived as a series of challenges, told as stories of adventure or quest. Rules of interaction within clinical teams were complex, context dependent and rarely explicit. Students, newly qualified and supervising doctors felt tensions around whether responsibility should be grasped or conferred. Perceived clinical necessity was a common determinant of responsibility rather than planned learning. Identity formation was chronologically mismatched to accepting responsibility. We provide a rich illumination of the complex relationship between responsibility and identity pre, during, and post-transition to qualified doctor: the two are inherently intertwined, each generating the other through successful actions in practice. This suggests successful transition requires a supported period of identity reconciliation during which responsibility may feel burdensome. During this, there is a fine line between too much and too little responsibility: seemingly innocuous assumptions can have a significant impact. More effort is needed to facilitate behaviours that delegate authority to the transitioning learner whilst maintaining true oversight.
从学生到医生的转变是众所周知的具有挑战性。新获得资格的医生在拥有新身份之前就被要求做出决策。了解责任与身份形成的关系对于改善医生和患者的过渡至关重要。这项多阶段的民族志研究通过预期、生活和反思阶段探索了过渡的现实。我们利用拉博夫的叙事框架(拉博夫在 J 叙事生活史 7(1-4):395-415,1997)对责任变化与专业身份发展之间的复杂关系进行深入分析。我们的目的是了解这些概念是如何相互作用的。新获得资格的医生通过参与式体验适应其角色要求,这种体验被视为一系列挑战,以冒险或探索的故事讲述。临床团队内部的互动规则复杂、依赖背景且很少明确。学生、新获得资格的医生和监督医生都感到紧张,不知道责任是应该被抓住还是被赋予。感知到的临床必要性是责任的常见决定因素,而不是有计划的学习。身份形成与承担责任在时间上不匹配。我们提供了一个丰富的说明,说明了责任和身份在过渡前后之间的复杂关系:两者本质上是相互交织的,通过实践中的成功行动相互产生。这表明成功的过渡需要一个支持性的身份和解期,在此期间,责任可能会感到负担沉重。在这期间,责任过多和过少之间存在着细微的差别:看似微不足道的假设也可能产生重大影响。需要付出更多的努力来促进将权力下放给过渡学习者的行为,同时保持真正的监督。