Merril A Pauls1. 1. University of Manitoba, Emergency Medicine, GF201-820 Sherbrook St, Winnipeg, MB R3A 1R9. pauls@cc.umanitoba.ca
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To document the scope of the teaching and evaluation of ethics and professionalism in Canadian family medicine postgraduate training programs, and to identify barriers to the teaching and evaluation of ethics and professionalism. DESIGN: A survey was developed in collaboration with the Committee on Ethics of the College of Family Physicians of Canada. The data are reported descriptively and in aggregate. SETTING: Canadian postgraduate family medicine training programs. PARTICIPANTS: Between June and December of 2008, all 17 Canadian postgraduate family medicine training programs were invited to participate. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The first part of the survey explored the structure, resources, methods, scheduled hours, and barriers to teaching ethics and professionalism. The second section focused on end-of-rotation evaluations, other evaluation strategies, and barriers related to the evaluation of ethics and professionalism. RESULTS: Eighty-eight percent of programs completed the survey. Most respondents (87%) had learning objectives specifically for ethics and professionalism, and 87% had family doctors with training or interest in the area leading their efforts. Two-thirds of responding programs had less than 10 hours of scheduled instruction per year, and the most common barriers to effective teaching were the need for faculty development, competing learning needs, and lack of resident interest. Ninety-three percent of respondents assessed ethics and professionalism on their end-of-rotation evaluations, with 86% assessing specific domains. The most common barriers to evaluation were a lack of suitable tools and a lack of faculty comfort and interest. CONCLUSION: By far most Canadian family medicine postgraduate training programs had learning objectives and designated faculty leads in ethics and professionalism, yet there was little curricular time dedicated to these areas and a perceived lack of resident interest and faculty expertise. Most programs evaluated ethics and professionalism as part of their end-of-rotation evaluations, but only a small number used novel means of evaluation, and most cited a lack of suitable assessment tools as an important barrier.
OBJECTIVE: To document the scope of the teaching and evaluation of ethics and professionalism in Canadian family medicine postgraduate training programs, and to identify barriers to the teaching and evaluation of ethics and professionalism. DESIGN: A survey was developed in collaboration with the Committee on Ethics of the College of Family Physicians of Canada. The data are reported descriptively and in aggregate. SETTING: Canadian postgraduate family medicine training programs. PARTICIPANTS: Between June and December of 2008, all 17 Canadian postgraduate family medicine training programs were invited to participate. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The first part of the survey explored the structure, resources, methods, scheduled hours, and barriers to teaching ethics and professionalism. The second section focused on end-of-rotation evaluations, other evaluation strategies, and barriers related to the evaluation of ethics and professionalism. RESULTS: Eighty-eight percent of programs completed the survey. Most respondents (87%) had learning objectives specifically for ethics and professionalism, and 87% had family doctors with training or interest in the area leading their efforts. Two-thirds of responding programs had less than 10 hours of scheduled instruction per year, and the most common barriers to effective teaching were the need for faculty development, competing learning needs, and lack of resident interest. Ninety-three percent of respondents assessed ethics and professionalism on their end-of-rotation evaluations, with 86% assessing specific domains. The most common barriers to evaluation were a lack of suitable tools and a lack of faculty comfort and interest. CONCLUSION: By far most Canadian family medicine postgraduate training programs had learning objectives and designated faculty leads in ethics and professionalism, yet there was little curricular time dedicated to these areas and a perceived lack of resident interest and faculty expertise. Most programs evaluated ethics and professionalism as part of their end-of-rotation evaluations, but only a small number used novel means of evaluation, and most cited a lack of suitable assessment tools as an important barrier.
Authors: Michael A Gisondi; Rebecca Smith-Coggins; Phillip M Harter; Robert C Soltysik; Paul R Yarnold Journal: Acad Emerg Med Date: 2004-09 Impact factor: 3.451
Authors: Thierry Daboval; Emanuela Ferretti; Ahmed Moussa; Michael van Manen; Gregory P Moore; Ganesh Srinivasan; Alexandru Moldovan; Amisha Agarwal; Susan Albersheim Journal: Paediatr Child Health Date: 2018-08-28 Impact factor: 2.253