Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand.
School of Medicine, Griffith University, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Jul 2;22(1):516. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03560-y.
Representation of specialist international medical graduates (SIMGs) in specific specialties such as surgery can be expected to grow as doctor shortages are predicted in the context of additional care provision for aging populations and limited local supply. Many national medical boards and colleges provide pathways for medical registration and fellowship of SIMGs that may include examinations and short-term training. There is currently very little understanding of how SIMGs are perceived by colleagues and whether their performance is perceived to be comparable to locally trained medical specialists. It is also not known how SIMGs perceive their own capabilities in comparison to local specialists. The aim of this study is to explore the relationships between colleague feedback and self-evaluation in the specialist area of surgery to identify possible methods for enhancing registration and follow-up training within the jurisdiction of Australia and New Zealand.
Feedback from 1728 colleagues to 96 SIMG surgeons and 406 colleagues to 25 locally trained Fellow surgeons was collected, resulting in 2134 responses to 121 surgeons in total. Additionally, 98 SIMGs and 25 Fellows provided self-evaluation scores (123 in total). Questionnaire and data reliability were calculated before analysis of variance, principal component analysis and network analysis were performed to identify differences between colleague evaluations and self-evaluations by surgeon type.
Colleagues rated SIMGs and Fellows in the 'very good' to 'excellent' range. Fellows received a small but statistically significant higher average score than SIMGs, especially in areas dealing with medical skills and expertise. However, SIMGs received higher scores where there was motivation to demonstrate working well with colleagues. Colleagues rated SIMGs using one dimension and Fellows using three, which can be identified as clinical management skills, inter-personal communication skills and self-management skills. On self-evaluation, both SIMGs and Fellows gave themselves a significant lower average score than their colleagues, with SIMGs giving themselves a statistically significant higher score than Fellows.
Colleagues rate SIMGs and Fellows highly. The results of this study indicate that SIMGs tend to self-assess more highly, but according to colleagues do not display the same level of differentiation between clinical management, inter-personal and self-management skills. Further research is required to confirm these provisional findings and possible reasons for lack of differentiation if this exists. Depending on the outcome, possible support mechanisms can be explored that may lead to increased comparable performance with locally trained graduates of Australia and New Zealand in these three dimensions.
随着人口老龄化和本地供应有限,预计医生短缺,因此在外科等特定专业领域,国际医学专业毕业生(SIMGs)的代表人数预计会增加。许多国家医学委员会和医学院为 SIMGs 的医学注册和奖学金提供途径,其中可能包括考试和短期培训。目前,人们对同事对 SIMGs 的看法以及他们的表现是否被认为与本地培训的医学专家相当知之甚少。也不知道 SIMGs 如何将自己的能力与本地专家进行比较。这项研究的目的是探讨外科专业领域中同事反馈与自我评估之间的关系,以确定在澳大利亚和新西兰司法管辖区内增强注册和后续培训的可能方法。
收集了 1728 位同事对 96 位 SIMG 外科医生和 406 位同事对 25 位本地培训研究员外科医生的反馈,总共收到了 121 位外科医生的 2134 份回复。此外,98 位 SIMG 和 25 位研究员提供了自我评估分数(总共 123 分)。在进行方差分析、主成分分析和网络分析之前,计算了问卷和数据的可靠性,以确定外科医生类型的同事评估和自我评估之间的差异。
同事们将 SIMG 和研究员评为“非常好”到“优秀”。研究员的平均得分略高于 SIMG,特别是在涉及医疗技能和专业知识的领域,但得分有统计学意义。然而,SIMG 在有动力与同事合作良好的情况下获得了更高的分数。同事们用一个维度来评价 SIMG,用三个维度来评价研究员,可以识别为临床管理技能、人际沟通技能和自我管理技能。在自我评估方面,SIMG 和研究员的自我评估平均分均明显低于同事的评分,SIMG 的自我评分明显高于研究员的自我评分。
同事对 SIMG 和研究员的评价很高。这项研究的结果表明,SIMG 往往自我评估更高,但根据同事的评价,他们在临床管理、人际关系和自我管理技能之间没有表现出同样的区分度。如果存在这种情况,需要进一步研究来证实这些初步发现和可能缺乏区分的原因。根据结果,可以探讨可能的支持机制,这可能会导致 SIMG 在这三个方面与澳大利亚和新西兰本地培训的毕业生表现更加可比。