Nadarajan Gayathri Devi, Rasappan Kumaran, Ng Jonathan Shen You, Junchen Melvin Lim, Yoon Sungwon
Department of Emergency Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore.
SingHealth Duke Global Health Institute, Singapore, Singapore.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Aug 8;24(1):854. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-05560-6.
Medical students in Singapore engage in short term medical missions, locally known as Overseas Community Involvement Projects (OCIPs). Little is known about the learning outcomes of an OCIP and how this complements their medical education back home. Understanding this can help the medical educators structure the OCIP to optimise its learning value.
This study aims to gain an in-depth understanding of the experiences and learning outcomes of the medical students who participated in the OCIP.
This was a qualitative study involving Singaporean students from one medical school travelling to Nepal. Data was collected from reflective journals, overall group reflections and two focus group discussions. The data was thematically analysed using the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical (ACGME) core competencies for medical professionals.
The data could be classified under various themes within the six domains of the ACGME framework. The study revealed themes of: humanism, socioeconomic and cultural determinants of health under the domain of patient care, application of medical knowledge, investigating and evaluating the needs of a population and feedback to drive improvement under the domain of practice-based learning and improvement, use of non-verbal cues and communicating across language barriers under the domain of interpersonal and communication skills, healthcare systems and delivery, resourcefulness and adaptability, health equity and accessibility under the domain of systems-based practice, ethics, role-modelling, teamwork and leadership skills, interprofessional skills and resilience under the domain of professionalism. Understanding the students' motivations, utilising reflections, and following the patients' journey facilitated attainment of these outcomes.
This OCIP experience translated to learning outcomes aligned with the ACGME framework. There is great potential for the experiential learning from a well-structured OCIP to help with personal and professional development and global health education.
新加坡的医学生参与短期医疗任务,当地称为海外社区参与项目(OCIPs)。对于OCIP的学习成果以及它如何补充他们在国内的医学教育,人们了解甚少。了解这一点有助于医学教育工作者构建OCIP,以优化其学习价值。
本研究旨在深入了解参与OCIP的医学生的经历和学习成果。
这是一项定性研究,涉及一所医学院前往尼泊尔的新加坡学生。数据收集自反思日记、小组整体反思和两次焦点小组讨论。使用医学专业研究生医学认证委员会(ACGME)的核心能力对数据进行主题分析。
数据可归类于ACGME框架六个领域中的不同主题。该研究揭示了以下主题:在患者护理领域下的人文主义、健康的社会经济和文化决定因素;在基于实践的学习与改进领域下的医学知识应用、调查和评估人群需求以及反馈以推动改进;在人际和沟通技能领域下的非语言线索运用和跨语言障碍沟通;在基于系统的实践领域下的医疗保健系统与服务、机智和适应能力、健康公平与可及性;在职业素养领域下的伦理、榜样作用、团队合作和领导技能、跨专业技能和适应能力。了解学生的动机、利用反思以及跟踪患者的就医过程有助于实现这些成果。
这种OCIP经历转化为与ACGME框架一致的学习成果。精心构建的OCIP所带来的体验式学习在促进个人和职业发展以及全球健康教育方面具有巨大潜力。