Lin-Martore Margaret, Kant Shruti, O'Brien Bridget C
Departments of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics University of California at San Francisco San Francisco California USA.
Department of Medicine University of California at San Francisco San Francisco California USA.
AEM Educ Train. 2021 Aug 1;5(4):e10696. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10696. eCollection 2021 Aug.
Pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) physicians receive training in critical procedures, but these procedures are rare in practice. The literature on maintenance of procedural skills focuses on ways to practice (e.g., via simulation) and pays little attention to motivation's role. Understanding what motivates PEM physicians to maintain procedural skills can inform the design of supportive policies and interventions. Our study explores how PEM physicians conceptualize maintenance of procedural skills, what motivates them to maintain procedural skills, and barriers to procedural skill maintenance.
This was a qualitative study of 12 PEM faculty guided by the self-determination theory (SDT) of motivation. SDT describes a typology that distinguishes extrinsic and intrinsic motivation, with intrinsic motivation based on autonomy, competence, and relatedness. Interviews were transcribed and coded using constant-comparative technique, and interviews continued until thematic sufficiency was achieved.
Participants had difficulty defining procedural skill maintenance by specific criteria and expressed ambivalence about external standards for competence, noting the need to account for individual and local practice factors. Three themes characterizing participants' motivation for procedural skills maintenance included: (1) desire to provide optimal patient care and fear of unsuccessful performance (competence), (2) procedural competence as part of the identity of a PEM physician who teaches and performs procedures (competence and relatedness), and (3) desire for accessibility and choice of options in maintaining procedural skills (autonomy). Participants identified lack of opportunities, time, and support as barriers to motivation and skills maintenance.
SDT concepts were integral to understanding faculty motivation, and this highlights the need for prioritizing faculty autonomy, competence, and relatedness in designing supports for procedural skill maintenance. Our findings regarding the difficulty in defining maintenance of skills emphasize the need for further discussion and study of this topic.
儿科急诊医学(PEM)医生接受关键操作方面的培训,但这些操作在实际中很少见。关于维持操作技能的文献主要关注练习方法(如通过模拟),而很少关注动机的作用。了解促使PEM医生维持操作技能的因素可以为支持性政策和干预措施的设计提供参考。我们的研究探讨了PEM医生如何理解操作技能的维持、促使他们维持操作技能的因素以及操作技能维持的障碍。
这是一项对12名PEM教员进行的定性研究,以动机的自我决定理论(SDT)为指导。SDT描述了一种区分外在动机和内在动机的类型,内在动机基于自主性、能力和关联性。访谈进行转录并使用持续比较技术进行编码,访谈持续进行直到达到主题饱和。
参与者难以通过具体标准定义操作技能的维持,并对能力的外部标准表示矛盾,指出需要考虑个体和当地实践因素。表征参与者维持操作技能动机的三个主题包括:(1)提供最佳患者护理的愿望和对操作失败的恐惧(能力),(2)操作能力是作为教授和进行操作的PEM医生身份的一部分(能力和关联性),以及(3)在维持操作技能方面对可及性和选择的愿望(自主性)。参与者将缺乏机会、时间和支持视为动机和技能维持的障碍。
SDT概念对于理解教员动机至关重要,这凸显了在设计操作技能维持支持措施时优先考虑教员自主性、能力和关联性的必要性。我们关于难以定义技能维持的发现强调了对该主题进行进一步讨论和研究的必要性。