Miriam Lacasse1, Savithiri Ratnapalan. 1. Département de médecine familiale et de médecine d'urgence, Laval University, Quebec City, Que. miriam.lacasse@mfa.ulaval.ca
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review the literature on teaching-skills training programs for family medicine residents and to identify formats and content of these programs and their effects. DATA SOURCES: Ovid MEDLINE (1950 to mid-July 2008) and the Education Resources Information Center database (pre-1966 to mid-July 2008) were searched using and combining the MeSH terms teaching, internship and residency, and family practice; and teaching, graduate medical education, and family practice. STUDY SELECTION: The initial MEDLINE and Education Resources Information Center database searches identified 362 and 33 references, respectively. Titles and abstracts were reviewed and studies were included if they described the format or content of a teaching-skills program or if they were primary studies of the effects of a teaching-skills program for family medicine residents or family medicine and other specialty trainees. The bibliographies of those articles were reviewed for unidentified studies. A total of 8 articles were identified for systematic review. Selection was limited to articles published in English. SYNTHESIS: Teaching-skills training programs for family medicine residents vary from half-day curricula to a few months of training. Their content includes leadership skills, effective clinical teaching skills, technical teaching skills, as well as feedback and evaluation skills. Evaluations mainly assessed the programs' effects on teaching behaviour, which was generally found to improve following participation in the programs. Evaluations of learner reactions and learning outcomes also suggested that the programs have positive effects. CONCLUSION: Family medicine residency training programs differ from all other residency training programs in their shorter duration, usually 2 years, and the broader scope of learning within those 2 years. Few studies on teaching-skills training, however, were designed specifically for family medicine residents. Further studies assessing the effects of teaching-skills training in family medicine residents are needed to stimulate development of adapted programs for the discipline. Future research should also assess how residents' teaching-skills training can affect their learners' clinical training and eventually patient care.
OBJECTIVE: To review the literature on teaching-skills training programs for family medicine residents and to identify formats and content of these programs and their effects. DATA SOURCES: Ovid MEDLINE (1950 to mid-July 2008) and the Education Resources Information Center database (pre-1966 to mid-July 2008) were searched using and combining the MeSH terms teaching, internship and residency, and family practice; and teaching, graduate medical education, and family practice. STUDY SELECTION: The initial MEDLINE and Education Resources Information Center database searches identified 362 and 33 references, respectively. Titles and abstracts were reviewed and studies were included if they described the format or content of a teaching-skills program or if they were primary studies of the effects of a teaching-skills program for family medicine residents or family medicine and other specialty trainees. The bibliographies of those articles were reviewed for unidentified studies. A total of 8 articles were identified for systematic review. Selection was limited to articles published in English. SYNTHESIS: Teaching-skills training programs for family medicine residents vary from half-day curricula to a few months of training. Their content includes leadership skills, effective clinical teaching skills, technical teaching skills, as well as feedback and evaluation skills. Evaluations mainly assessed the programs' effects on teaching behaviour, which was generally found to improve following participation in the programs. Evaluations of learner reactions and learning outcomes also suggested that the programs have positive effects. CONCLUSION: Family medicine residency training programs differ from all other residency training programs in their shorter duration, usually 2 years, and the broader scope of learning within those 2 years. Few studies on teaching-skills training, however, were designed specifically for family medicine residents. Further studies assessing the effects of teaching-skills training in family medicine residents are needed to stimulate development of adapted programs for the discipline. Future research should also assess how residents' teaching-skills training can affect their learners' clinical training and eventually patient care.
Authors: Elizabeth H Morrison; John R Boker; Judy Hollingshead; Michael D Prislin; Maurice A Hitchcock; Debra K Litzelman Journal: Acad Med Date: 2002-10 Impact factor: 6.893
Authors: Elizabeth H Morrison; Judy Hollingshead; F Allan Hubbell; Maurice A Hitchcock; Lloyd Rucker; Michael D Prislin Journal: Fam Med Date: 2002-06 Impact factor: 1.756
Authors: Jamiu O Busari; Katinka J A H Prince; Albert J J A Scherpbier; Cees P M Van Der Vleuten; Gerard G M Essed Journal: Med Teach Date: 2002-01 Impact factor: 3.650
Authors: Elizabeth H Morrison; Lloyd Rucker; John R Boker; Judy Hollingshead; Maurice A Hitchcock; Michael D Prislin; F Allan Hubbell Journal: Acad Med Date: 2003-07 Impact factor: 6.893
Authors: Elizabeth H Morrison; Lloyd Rucker; John R Boker; Charles C Gabbert; F Allan Hubbell; Maurice A Hitchcock; Michael D Prislin Journal: Ann Intern Med Date: 2004-08-17 Impact factor: 25.391
Authors: Nancy M Tofil; Dawn Taylor Peterson; Kathy F Harrington; Brian T Perrin; Tyler Hughes; J Lynn Zinkan; Amber Q Youngblood; Al Bartolucci; Marjorie Lee White Journal: J Grad Med Educ Date: 2014-03
Authors: Marietjie R de Villiers; Francois J Cilliers; Francois Coetzee; Nicoline Herman; Martie van Heusden; Klaus B von Pressentin Journal: BMC Med Educ Date: 2014-10-22 Impact factor: 2.463
Authors: Sara M Krzyzaniak; Alan Cherney; Anne Messman; Sreeja Natesan; Michael Overbeck; Benjamin Schnapp; Megan Boysen-Osborn Journal: Cureus Date: 2018-02-04