Literature DB >> 12446540

Postal survey of approaches to learning among Ontario physicians: implications for continuing medical education.

M Dianne Delva1, John R Kirby, Christopher K Knapper, R V Birtwhistle.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To understand the approaches to learning of practising physicians in their workplace and to assess the relation of these approaches to their motivation for, preferred methods of, and perceived barriers to continuing medical education.
DESIGN: Postal survey of 800 Ontario physicians. PARTICIPANTS: 373 physicians who responded. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Correlations of approaches to learning and perceptions of workplace climate with methods, motives, and barriers to continuing medical education.
RESULTS: Perceived heavy workload was significantly associated with the surface disorganised (r=0.463, P<0.01) and surface rational approach (r=0.135, P<0.05) to learning. The deep approach to learning was significantly correlated with a perception of choice-independence and a supportive-receptive climate at work (r=0.341 and 0.237, P<0.01). Physicians who adopt a deep approach to learning seem to be internally motivated to learn, whereas external motivation is associated with surface approaches to learning. Heavy workload and a surface disorganised approach to learning were correlated with every listed barrier to continuing medical education. The deep approach to learning was associated with independent learning activities and no barriers.
CONCLUSIONS: Perception of the workplace climate affects physicians' approaches to learning at work and their motivation for and perceived barriers to continuing medical education. Younger, rural, family physicians may be most vulnerable to feeling overworked and adopting less effective approaches to learning. Further work is required to determine if changing the workplace environment will help physicians learn more effectively.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12446540      PMCID: PMC135496          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.325.7374.1218

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


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