Literature DB >> 26505105

Thresholds of Principle and Preference: Exploring Procedural Variation in Postgraduate Surgical Education.

Tavis Apramian, Sayra Cristancho, Chris Watling, Michael Ott, Lorelei Lingard.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Expert physicians develop their own ways of doing things. The influence of such practice variation in clinical learning is insufficiently understood. Our grounded theory study explored how residents make sense of, and behave in relation to, the procedural variations of faculty surgeons.
METHOD: We sampled senior postgraduate surgical residents to construct a theoretical framework for how residents make sense of procedural variations. Using a constructivist grounded theory approach, we used marginal participant observation in the operating room across 56 surgical cases (146 hours), field interviews (38), and formal interviews (6) to develop a theoretical framework for residents' ways of dealing with procedural variations. Data analysis used constant comparison to iteratively refine the framework and data collection until theoretical saturation was reached.
RESULTS: The core category of the constructed theory was called thresholds of principle and preference and it captured how faculty members position some procedural variations as negotiable and others not. The term thresholding was coined to describe residents' daily experiences of spotting, mapping, and negotiating their faculty members' thresholds and defending their own emerging thresholds.
CONCLUSIONS: Thresholds of principle and preference play a key role in workplace-based medical education. Postgraduate medical learners are occupied on a day-to-day level with thresholding and attempting to make sense of the procedural variations of faculty. Workplace-based teaching and assessment should include an understanding of the integral role of thresholding in shaping learners' development. Future research should explore the nature and impact of thresholding in workplace-based learning beyond the surgical context.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26505105      PMCID: PMC5578750          DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000909

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  43 in total

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5.  Adaptation and innovation: a grounded theory study of procedural variation in the academic surgical workplace.

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Review 6.  The "educational alliance" as a framework for reconceptualizing feedback in medical education.

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  8 in total

1.  "They Have to Adapt to Learn": Surgeons' Perspectives on the Role of Procedural Variation in Surgical Education.

Authors:  Tavis Apramian; Sayra Cristancho; Chris Watling; Michael Ott; Lorelei Lingard
Journal:  J Surg Educ       Date:  2015-12-15       Impact factor: 2.891

2.  How Do Thresholds of Principle and Preference Influence Surgeon Assessments of Learner Performance?

Authors:  Tavis Apramian; Sayra Cristancho; Alp Sener; Lorelei Lingard
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3.  "Staying in the Game": How Procedural Variation Shapes Competence Judgments in Surgical Education.

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6.  Surgical residents' challenges with the acquisition of surgical skills in operating rooms: A qualitative study.

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  8 in total

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