Li Shelly-Anne, Acai Anita, Sherbino Jonathan, Chan Teresa M
Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada.
Department of Psychology Neuroscience & Behaviour and Office of Education Science Department of Surgery McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada.
AEM Educ Train. 2020 Jan 26;5(1):52-62. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10431. eCollection 2021 Jan.
Emergency medicine is a fast-paced specialty that demands emergency physicians to respond to rapidly evolving patient presentations, while engaging in clinical supervision. Most research on supervisory roles has focused on the behaviors of attending physicians, including their individual preferences of supervision and level of entrustment of clinical tasks to trainees. However, less research has investigated how the clinical context (patient case complexity, workflow) influences clinical supervision. In this study, we examined how the context of the emergency department (ED) shapes the ways in which emergency physicians reconcile their competing roles in patient care and clinical supervision to optimize learning and ensure patient safety.
Emergency physicians who regularly participated in clinical supervision in several academic teaching hospitals were individually interviewed using a semi-structured format. The interviews were transcribed and analyzed using a constructivist grounded theory approach.
Sixteen emergency physicians were asked to reflect on their clinical supervisory roles in the ED. We conceptualized a model that describes three prominent roles: teacher, assessor, and patient protector. Contextual features such as trainee competence, pace of the ED, patient complexity, and the culture of academic medicine influenced the extent to which certain roles were considered salient at any given time.
This conceptual model can inform researchers and medical educators about the role of context in accentuating or minimizing various roles of emergency physicians. Identifying how context interfaces with these roles may help design faculty development initiatives aimed to navigate the tension between urgent patient care and medical education for emergency physicians.
急诊医学是一个节奏快的专业,要求急诊医生在进行临床监督的同时,对迅速变化的患者表现做出反应。大多数关于监督角色的研究都集中在主治医生的行为上,包括他们个人的监督偏好以及将临床任务委托给实习生的程度。然而,较少有研究调查临床环境(患者病例复杂性、工作流程)如何影响临床监督。在本研究中,我们考察了急诊科环境如何塑造急诊医生在患者护理和临床监督中协调其相互竞争的角色的方式,以优化学习并确保患者安全。
对几家学术教学医院中定期参与临床监督的急诊医生进行半结构化的个人访谈。访谈内容经转录后采用建构主义扎根理论方法进行分析。
16名急诊医生被要求反思他们在急诊科的临床监督角色。我们构建了一个模型,描述了三个突出的角色:教师、评估者和患者保护者。诸如实习生能力、急诊科节奏、患者复杂性以及学术医学文化等背景特征,会影响在任何给定时间某些角色被视为突出角色的程度。
这个概念模型可以让研究人员和医学教育工作者了解环境在突出或最小化急诊医生各种角色方面的作用。确定环境如何与这些角色相互作用,可能有助于设计师资发展计划,以应对急诊医生在紧急患者护理和医学教育之间的紧张关系。