Literature DB >> 20946480

An ethnographic study of attending rounds in general paediatrics: understanding the ritual.

Dorene F Balmer1, Christina L Master, Boyd F Richards, Janet R Serwint, Angelo P Giardino.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Teaching at the bedside during attending rounds is considered to be fundamental to medical education. We conducted an ethnographic case study to investigate such teaching in general paediatrics as a social phenomenon and to explore change over time in both the meaning of rounds and the context in which rounds take place.
METHODS: We conducted a case study from January to August 2006 on a 22-bed general paediatric unit in an urban children's hospital and focused our observation on interns, senior residents and attending physicians. We observed the medical team during its normal activities on the study unit and conducted semi-structured interviews with a sample of attendings, interns and senior residents. We compiled a list of codes that emerged from patterns in the data and constructed a rich description of rounds according to the principles of inductive analysis.
RESULTS: Four themes emerged from the data: (i) attending rounds are a pervasive and routine part of clinical education; (ii) interns, senior residents and attending physicians hold assumptions about what should happen on rounds; (iii) tension exists between interns', senior residents' and attending physicians' assumptions about bedside teaching during rounds and the reality imposed by contextual factors, and (iv) bedside teaching during rounds is impacted, but not prohibited, by contextual factors.
CONCLUSIONS: Our case study provides evidence that bedside teaching during rounds is a pedagogical ideal entrenched in medical education. Participants readily acknowledged teaching at the bedside during rounds as something they perceived should happen, although, in actuality, it was infrequently achieved. This study revealed a telling inconsistency in language and behaviour: 'bedside rounds' was embedded in the participants' ordinary language, but the activity was not necessarily part of their ordinary behaviour. We propose that the practice of bedside teaching is best explained as a ritual. Considering bedside teaching as a ritual helps to explain why rounds are sacrosanct and helps to develop more appropriate expectations for rounds. © Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2010.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20946480     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2010.03767.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Educ        ISSN: 0308-0110            Impact factor:   6.251


  6 in total

1.  Use of ecological momentary assessment to determine which structural factors impact perceived teaching quality of attending rounds.

Authors:  Lisa Willett; Thomas K Houston; Gustavo R Heudebert; Carlos Estrada
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2012-09

2.  The prevalence of social and behavioral topics and related educational opportunities during attending rounds.

Authors:  Jason M Satterfield; Sylvia Bereknyei; Joan F Hilton; Alyssa L Bogetz; Rebecca Blankenburg; Sara M Buckelew; H Carrie Chen; Bradley Monash; Jacqueline S Ramos; Stephanie Rennke; Clarence H Braddock
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 6.893

3.  Rounds Today: A Qualitative Study of Internal Medicine and Pediatrics Resident Perceptions.

Authors:  Raphael Rabinowitz; Jeanne Farnan; Oliver Hulland; Lisa Kearns; Michele Long; Bradley Monash; Priti Bhansali; H Barrett Fromme
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2016-10

4.  Treatment Collaboration When the Stakes Are High: Ethnographically Studying Family-Centered Care in an Outpatient Pediatric Specialty Clinic.

Authors:  Georgia Michalopoulou; Sherylyn Briller; Kimberly Compton Katzer; Kaitlin C Muklewicz; Julia Wasiluk; Beverly Crider; Stephanie Myers-Schim; Elizabeth Secord
Journal:  J Patient Exp       Date:  2017-08-11

5.  Exploring reasoning mechanisms in ward rounds: a critical realist multiple case study.

Authors:  Paul Perversi; John Yearwood; Emilia Bellucci; Andrew Stranieri; Jim Warren; Frada Burstein; Heather Mays; Alan Wolff
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2018-08-17       Impact factor: 2.655

6.  Observations of the hidden curriculum on a paediatrics tertiary care clinical teaching unit.

Authors:  Asif Doja; M Dylan Bould; Chantalle Clarkin; Marc Zucker; Hilary Writer
Journal:  Paediatr Child Health       Date:  2018-02-17       Impact factor: 2.253

  6 in total

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