| Literature DB >> 24037741 |
Simon C Riley1, Jeremy Morton, David C Ray, David G Swann, Donald J Davidson.
Abstract
Student selected components (SSCs), at that time termed special study modules, were arguably the most innovative element in Tomorrow's Doctors (1993), the document from the General Medical Council that initiated the modernization of medical curricula in the UK. SSCs were proposed to make up one-third of the medical curriculum and provide students with choice, whilst allowing individual schools autonomy in how SSCs were utilized. In response, at the University of Edinburgh the undergraduate medical curriculum provides an integrated and sequential development and assessment of research skill learning outcomes, for all students in the SSC programme. The curriculum contains SSCs which provide choice to students in all 5 years. There are four substantial timetabled SSCs where students develop research skills in a topic and speciality of their choice. These SSCs are fully integrated and mapped with core learning outcomes and assessment, particularly with the 'Evidence-Based Medicine and Research' programme theme. These research skills are developed incrementally and applied fully in a research project in the fourth year. One-third of students also perform an optional intercalated one-year honours programme between years 2 and 3, usually across a wide range of honours schools at the biomedical science interface. Student feedback is insightful and demonstrates perceived attainment of research competencies. The establishment of these competencies is discussed in the context of enabling junior graduate doctors to be effective and confident at utilizing their research skills to effectively practice evidence-based medicine. This includes examining their own practice through clinical audit, developing an insight into the complexity of the evidence base and uncertainty, and also gaining a view into a career as a clinical academic.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24037741 PMCID: PMC3792228 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-013-0079-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
Alignment of the “research” learning outcomes the Edinburgh Medical Curriculum SSC programme with Tomorrow’s Doctors [1]
| Tomorrow’s Doctors (GMC [ | Edinburgh MBChB learning outcomes | |
|---|---|---|
| 12 |
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The Edinburgh medical graduate will be able to: Use the best available medical evidence, found through a systematic search and appraisal of the relevant information sources, to inform their clinical decisions; and develop new knowledge or personal understanding through the application of basic research methods and skills | ||
| 12(b) | Formulate simple relevant research questions in biomedical science, psychological science or population science, and design appropriate studies or experiments to address the questions | Formulate straightforward, relevant research questions for literature reviews and design appropriate studies or experiments to address the questions |
| Perform simple medically relevant research and audit studies to collect and analyze data | ||
| 19(d) | Access information sources | Identify and interrogate appropriate sources of information, including bibliographic databases |
| 12(a) | Critically appraise the results of relevant diagnostic, prognostic and treatment trials and other qualitative and quantitative studies as reported in the medical and scientific literature | Critically appraise relevant diagnostic, prognostic and treatment trials and other sources of information including qualitative and quantitative studies |
| 12(c) | Apply findings from the literature to answer questions raised by specific clinical problems | Apply findings from the literature to answer questions raised by specific clinical problems, relating to patient care, health promotion and giving advice and information to patients |
| 19(d) | And use information in relation to patient care, health promotion, giving advice and information to patients, and research and education | Apply findings from own research and literature studies for clinical practice, further research and education |
| 19 |
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The Edinburgh medical graduate will be able to: Use computers, computing, information and information technology effectively in a medical context | ||
| 19(b) | Make effective use of computers and other information systems, including storing and retrieving information | Make effective use of computers and other information systems, including storing and retrieving information |
| Make appropriate and safe use of electronic communications | ||
| Make appropriate and effective use of electronic health records | ||
| 19(c) | Keep to the requirements of confidentiality and data protection legislation and codes of practice in all dealings with information | Keep to the requirements of confidentiality and data protection legislation and codes of practice in all dealings with information including audit and research |
| Apply the principles, method and knowledge of informed consent protocols when handling and/or transferring patient data | ||
| 19(e) | Apply the principles, method and knowledge of health informatics to medical practice | Apply the principles, method and knowledge of health informatics to medical practice |
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| 20 |
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The Edinburgh medical graduate will be able to: Practise medicine safely, within an ethical framework, with insight and compassion, according to the legal requirements and professional expectations of medical practice in the UK | ||
| 12(d) | Understand the ethical and governance issues involved in medical research | Demonstrate an understanding of the ethics and regulation of research with humans and animals in biomedical research, clinical research and audit, and of critical reflection on the interests of individuals and society |
Compiled students responses from online quality assurance questionnaires, from 2008 to 2012
| Strongly agree/agree (%) | Neither (%) | Disagree/strongly disagree (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| I have been able to gain a greater depth of understanding in this topic/project/field than is usual in other parts of the course | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 88.0 | 8.0 | 4.0 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 92.6 | 3.8 | 3.5 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 94.9 | 4.0 | 1.0 |
| I have further developed my critical analysis skills during this SSC | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 73.6 | 18.3 | 8.1 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 89.7 | 4.8 | 5.5 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 92.6 | 5.1 | 2.3 |
| This SSC has enabled me to further develop my statistical/data analysis skills | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 47.7 | 28.4 | 23.9 |
| Question not asked as no data handling in this year 2 SSC | |||
| Year 4—SSC4 | 88.5 | 9.2 | 2.3 |
| This SSC has enabled me to further develop my informatics/IT skills | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 48.3 | 25.4 | 26.1 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 71.0 | 16.8 | 12.3 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 91.5 | 6.8 | 1.7 |
| I have further developed my skills and awareness for working in a team | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 92.0 | 6.3 | 1.7 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 89.4 | 7.1 | 3.5 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 74.1 | 15.5 | 10.3 |
| The SSC1 has enabled me to further develop my independent management skills | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 82.2 | 12.5 | 5.2 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 80.1 | 12.8 | 7.1 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 96.6 | 2.8 | 0.5 |
| I have gained further understanding of some of the ethical issues underpinning medicine during this SSC | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 58.7 | 26.6 | 14.7 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 44.3 | 25.6 | 30.5 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 74.4 | 17.2 | 8.3 |
| I have further developed my presentation skills (this includes written, oral and visual formats) | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 84.5 | 12.1 | 3.3 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 74.4 | 14.7 | 10.9 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 84.5 | 8.6 | 6.9 |
| This SSC was challenging | |||
| Year 1—SSC1 | 75.1 | 15.7 | 9.1 |
| Year 2—SSC2a | 76.3 | 17.9 | 5.8 |
| Year 4—SSC4 | 94.9 | 3.4 | 1.7 |
To reduce questionnaire overload, not all students were sampled, although there was remarkable consistency throughout between different years for each question in each SSC. Response rates are 287 of 469 (61.2 %), 312 of 479 (64.7 %), and 177 of 322 (55.0 %), for years 1, 2 and 4, respectively
Feedback comments on their research SSCs
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| ‘Being able to work as part of a group; this was much more enjoyable and less isolating than ‘self-study’; the opportunity to actually produce a piece of work (as opposed to simply memorizing facts), that would be submitted and graded’ (SSC2a, 2010) |
| ‘It gave me the push I needed to really apply critical skills when reading articles and reviews. It was liberating in the case that I got to write what I thought for once’ (SSC2a, 2010) |
| ‘SSC4 allowed me the opportunity to explore my chosen area of medicine further. I gained much in the way of organization and data management skills, and feel competent now in statistical analyses. My tutor was very supportive and the whole process was very rewarding’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘I loved the opportunity to study something I really enjoyed, get a lot of clinical experience and have the experience of doing clinical research in a supported environment’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘Having to undertake a project but take a lot more responsibility for appropriate self-learning, organization and work’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘Learning new skills—systematic review, data analysis, graphs, statistical techniques. My supervisor was excellent—I really enjoyed working with her. Being able to manage my own time and set my own goals’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘Having the opportunity to explore an area you are interested in, and contribute something useful!’ (SSC4, 2010) |
| ‘I really enjoyed the independence to investigate and area of interest. I also felt getting to be part of a new team and meeting people in a field I’m interested in invaluable’ (SSC4, 2010) |
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| ‘I am keen to work in the speciality that I chose for my SSC and this gave me a good opportunity to learn more about the topic area and the challenges of working in a busy department’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘I wanted to do an SSC4 in a field to which medical students receive little clinical exposure, to broaden my learning experience’ (SSC4, 2010) |
| ‘I had a particular interest in the area of my project before starting, and thought this would be a good way of finding out more about it and gaining an insight into the speciality’ (SSC4, 2009) |
| Reflect and comment on any changes that you should have implemented to improve the experience and outcomes |
| ‘I think I could always say that I could have planned something better with hindsight and this was no different, there were aspects which I had not considered. It would have been useful to spend perhaps a little more time beforehand reading up on the condition which I was investigating further’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘I sometimes should have asked for help sooner, rather than struggling to understand something on my own’ (SSC4, 2011) |
| ‘I think I could have been more organised with my time at the beginning of the project. However it was only through trying to get over difficulties that I was able to find the best way to do things. If I had to do it again, I would have a much better idea of how to conduct the project’ (SSC4 2010) |
| ‘Too easy to leave things [to the] last minute. Despite the [course organisers] best attempts to provide information I still felt unprepared for how much time some aspects of the project would take’ (SSC4, 2011) |
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| ‘I feel that the marking for this SSC was unfair in that everybody got the same mark. I felt that within our group there were huge differences in the amount of work and effort that individuals put in and this is not reflected in the mark that people have received as well as making the peer feedback seem slightly irrelevant as there is no point in giving one person excellent feedback and another poor feedback if there is no way that this will influence their overall grades’ (SSC2a, 2010) |