Department of Dental Education & Dental Research Institute, School of Dentistry, Seoul National University, 101 Daehak-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, 03080, South Korea.
Dental Research Institute, School of Dentistry, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Aug 9;23(1):563. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04543-3.
Micromanagement in clinical supervision in health professions education generally refers to supervision characterized by unproductive excessive control and attention to detail. It can affect autonomy, competence, well-being of learners, teamwork, and ultimately patient care. Despite its potential negative impact on learners and patients, no comprehensive review of this phenomenon has been conducted. This scoping review aims to explore the breadth of extant literature concerning micromanagement in clinical supervision in health professions education and map the body of research on the topic. We followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis: Extension for Scoping Review (PRISMA-ScR). We searched eight databases, and the final review and analysis comprised 12 articles that examined micromanagement in clinical supervision across health professions education. Micromanagement was conceptualized as ineffective supervisory practices such as undue scrutiny, excessive control, domination, and ineffectual leadership. Conversely, alternatives to micromanagement included entrusting or granting autonomy, coaching for independent practice, and providing effective supervision and leadership. Overall, micromanagement was attributed to individual behavioral and personality factors, such as distrust, perfectionism, self-conviction, and low self-esteem. The consequences of micromanagement included inadequacies in professional development and well-being of trainees and patient care, and organizational dysfunction. Suggested solutions included entrusting or empowering trainees with encouragement and clear communication, open communication efforts by trainees, organizational management for quality supervision, and faculty's valuing both clinical and educational goals. Current literature on micromanagement-in the context of clinical supervision in health professions education-was found to be sparse, implying a need for more rigorous research and discourse on this understudied area. The findings can be used to recognize, solve, and prevent the prevalent, and often unrecognized, phenomena of micromanagement, which may improve clinical supervision, the professional development of trainees and faculty, organizational management, and ultimately patient care.
临床监督中的微观管理通常是指监督的特点是缺乏成效的过度控制和对细节的关注。它会影响学习者的自主性、能力、幸福感、团队合作,最终影响患者护理。尽管它对学习者和患者可能产生负面影响,但尚未对这一现象进行全面审查。这项范围界定审查旨在探索健康专业教育中临床监督微观管理的现有文献广度,并绘制该主题的研究体。我们遵循了系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目:范围审查扩展(PRISMA-ScR)。我们搜索了八个数据库,最终的审查和分析包括了 12 篇文章,这些文章研究了健康专业教育中临床监督的微观管理。微观管理被概念化为无效的监督实践,如过度审查、过度控制、支配和无效领导。相反,微观管理的替代方法包括授权或授予自主权、为独立实践提供指导、提供有效的监督和领导。总体而言,微观管理归因于个人行为和个性因素,如不信任、完美主义、自我信念和低自尊。微观管理的后果包括学员的专业发展和幸福感不足,以及患者护理和组织功能障碍。建议的解决方案包括授权或鼓励学员,提供明确的沟通、学员进行坦诚的沟通、组织管理以确保监督质量、以及教师重视临床和教育目标。在健康专业教育的临床监督背景下,关于微观管理的现有文献相对较少,这表明需要对这一研究不足的领域进行更严格的研究和讨论。这些发现可用于识别、解决和预防普遍存在且通常未被认识到的微观管理现象,这可能会改善临床监督、学员和教师的专业发展、组织管理以及最终的患者护理。