Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, East Melbourne, Australia.
Med Educ. 2020 Nov;54(11):993-1005. doi: 10.1111/medu.14203. Epub 2020 Jun 24.
Becoming a clinician is a trajectory of identity formation in the context of supervised practice. This is a social process where the supervisory relationship is key. Therefore, to know how to support identity formation of clinical trainees, it is necessary to understand how this happens within the supervisory relationship. Our aim was to develop a conceptualisation of trainee identity formation within the general practice supervisory relationship to aid its support.
We took a critical realist approach using case study design and 'cultural worlds' theory as a conceptual frame. Each case comprised a general practice trainee and supervisor pair. Our data were weekly audiorecordings of interactions between trainee, supervisor and a patient over 12 weeks augmented by post-interaction reflections and sequential interviews. We undertook interpretive analysis using dialogic methods focusing on the doing of language and the cultural discourses expressed.
We identified three social discourses centring on: clinical responsibility; ownership of clinical knowledge, and measures of trainee competency. Versions of these discourses defined four trainee-supervisor relational arrangements within which trainee and supervisor assumed reciprocal identities. We labelled these: junior learner and expert clinician; apprentice assistant and master coach, and lead clinician and advisor. We found a trajectory across these identity arrangements. Behind this trajectory was an invitation by the supervisor to the trainee into the social space of clinician and a readiness of the trainee to accept this invitation. Congruence in supervisor and trainee positioning was important.
In the supervisory relationship, trainee and supervisor adopted reciprocal identities. For trainees to progress to identity of 'lead clinician,' supervisors needed to invite their trainee into this space and vacate it themselves. Congruence between supervisor positioning of their trainee and trainee authorship of themselves was important and was aided by explicit dialogue and common purpose. We offer a model and language for trainees, supervisors and departments or schools to facilitate this.
在监督实践的背景下,成为临床医生是一个身份形成的轨迹。这是一个社会过程,其中监督关系是关键。因此,要了解如何支持临床受训者的身份形成,就必须了解这种情况在监督关系中是如何发生的。我们的目的是在一般实践监督关系中对受训者身份形成进行概念化,以帮助其得到支持。
我们采用了批判现实主义的方法,使用案例研究设计和“文化世界”理论作为概念框架。每个案例都包括一名普通科实习医生和一名导师。我们的数据是 12 周内实习生、导师和患者之间每周的录音,辅以互动后的反思和顺序访谈。我们使用对话方法进行解释性分析,重点关注语言的运用和表达的文化话语。
我们确定了三个以临床责任为中心的社会话语;临床知识的所有权和衡量实习生能力的标准。这些话语的版本定义了实习生和导师在其中承担相互身份的四种实习生-导师关系安排。我们将这些安排命名为:初级学习者和专家临床医生;学徒助理和大师教练,以及首席临床医生和顾问。我们发现了一个贯穿这些身份安排的轨迹。在这个轨迹的背后,是导师邀请实习生进入临床医生的社会空间,以及实习生接受这个邀请的意愿。导师和实习生的定位一致性很重要。
在监督关系中,实习生和导师采用了相互的身份。为了让实习生能够发展成为“首席临床医生”的身份,导师需要邀请他们的实习生进入这个空间,并自己腾出这个空间。导师对他们的实习生的定位与实习生对自己的认同之间的一致性很重要,这得益于明确的对话和共同的目标。我们为实习生、导师和部门或学校提供了一个模型和语言,以促进这一点。