| Literature DB >> 25653570 |
Brendan McCullough1, Gregory E Marton1, Christopher J Ramnanan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several medical schools have implemented programs aimed at supporting clinician-educators with formal mentoring, training, and experience in undergraduate medical teaching. However, consensus program design has yet to be established, and the effectiveness of these programs in terms of producing quality clinician-educator teaching remains unclear. The goal of this study was to review the literature to identify motivations and perceived barriers to clinician-educators, which in turn will improve clinician-educator training programs to better align with clinician-educator needs and concerns.Entities:
Keywords: clinician-educators; teaching; undergraduate medical education
Year: 2015 PMID: 25653570 PMCID: PMC4309549 DOI: 10.2147/AMEP.S70139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med Educ Pract ISSN: 1179-7258
Summary of motivations and barriers identified in literature review
| Proportion of reviewed articles | Examples | |
|---|---|---|
| Intrinsic motivations | 29/38 (76%) | • Enjoyment in observing outcomes of teaching |
| Extrinsic motivations | 15/38 (39%) | • Financial compensation |
| Decreased productivity | 17/38 (45%) | • Lack of time to work with students |
| Increased length of day | 8/38 (21%) | • Work took longer to complete in presence of students |
| Lack of compensation | 10/38 (26%) | • Level of pay inadequate for time commitment involved |
| Patient concerns/ethical issues | 9/38 (24%) | • Patients may be reluctant to divulge information in presence of student |
| Lack of clinician-educator confidence | 9/38 (24%) | • Physician “short-cuts” in physical exam were not appropriate for students to learn |
Summary of recommendations addressing motivations and barriers experienced by physicians
| Recommendations | |
|---|---|
| Intrinsic motivations | • Program developers may want to consider promoting the rewards of teaching and remind physicians that they have a unique opportunity to inspire students and help influence the future of patient care |
| Extrinsic motivations | • Have teaching contributions systematically recorded and compiled in a teaching portfolio or departmental database |
| Decreased productivity/increased length of day | • Reduce average daily patient list sizes to allow for protected teaching time |
| Lack of compensation | • Five major elements that are seen as essential to have in a faculty teaching program in order to establish equitable salaries for all physicians involved: accepted standards of adequate performance; systematic review of the performance of academic staff; mechanisms for rewarding excellence; structured and effective means of providing assistance to those whose performance is suboptimal; and options for sanctions against those whose performance is consistently suboptimal |
| Patient concerns/ethical issues | • Identify the student before seeking patient consent for teaching |
| Lack of clinician-educator confidence | • Physicians should be granted ample opportunity to increase their skills as teachers, lecturers, coaches, mentors, and evaluators regardless of whether they are in a tertiary medical center or in the community |
Note: Data from Cook D. Study of Clinical Teachers in Canadian Faculties of Medicine. The Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada; 2009. Available from: https://www.afmc.ca/pdf/Study%20of%20Clinical%20Teachers%20-%20Discussion%20Paper.pdf. Accessed October 11, 2014.8