Brown Allison, Kassam Aliya, Paget Mike, Blades Kenneth, Mercia Megan, Kachra Rahim
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Faculty of Science, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Can Med Educ J. 2021 Jun 30;12(3):28-43. doi: 10.36834/cmej.71149. eCollection 2021 Jun.
The evidence surrounding the impact of COVID-19 on medical learners remains anecdotal and highly speculative despite the anticipated impact and potential consequences of the current pandemic on medical training. The purpose of this study was to explore the extent that COVID-19 initially impacted medical learners around the world and examine global trends and patterns across geographic regions and levels of training.
A cross-sectional survey of medical learners was conducted between March 25-June 14, 2020, shortly after the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic.
6492 learners completed the survey from 140 countries. Most medical schools removed learners from the clinical environment and adopted online learning, but students reported concerns about the quality of their learning, training progression, and milestone fulfillment. Residents reported they could be better utilized and expressed concerns about their career timeline. Trainees generally felt under-utilized and wanted to be engaged clinically in meaningful ways; however, some felt that contributing to healthcare during a pandemic was beyond the scope of a learner. Significant differences were detected between levels of training and geographic regions for satisfaction with organizational responses as well as the impact of COVID-19 learner wellness and state-trait anxiety.
The disruption to the status quo of medical education is perceived by learners across all levels and geographic regions to have negatively affected their training and well-being, particularly amongst postgraduate trainees. These results provide initial empirical insights into the areas that warrant future research as well as consideration for current and future policy planning.
尽管当前疫情对医学培训产生了预期影响和潜在后果,但关于新冠病毒病(COVID-19)对医学学习者影响的证据仍然是传闻性的且极具推测性。本研究的目的是探讨COVID-19最初对全球医学学习者的影响程度,并研究跨地理区域和培训水平的全球趋势和模式。
在世界卫生组织宣布COVID-19为大流行病后不久,于2020年3月25日至6月14日对医学学习者进行了一项横断面调查。
来自140个国家的6492名学习者完成了调查。大多数医学院将学习者从临床环境中撤出并采用了在线学习,但学生们报告了对学习质量、培训进展和里程碑完成情况的担忧。住院医师报告称他们可以得到更好的利用,并表达了对其职业时间表的担忧。实习生普遍感到未得到充分利用,并希望以有意义的方式参与临床工作;然而,一些人认为在大流行期间为医疗保健做出贡献超出了学习者的范围。在培训水平和地理区域之间,对组织应对措施的满意度以及COVID-19对学习者健康和状态-特质焦虑的影响存在显著差异。
所有培训水平和地理区域的学习者都认为医学教育现状的 disruption 对他们的培训和幸福感产生了负面影响,特别是在研究生实习生中。这些结果为值得未来研究的领域以及当前和未来政策规划的考虑提供了初步的实证见解。