| Literature DB >> 27421655 |
Ruth McNair1, Leonie Griffiths2, Katharine Reid3, Hannah Sloan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical student clinical confidence and positive attitudes to patient centredness are important outcomes of medical education. The clinical placement setting is regarded as a critical support to these outcomes, so understanding how the setting is influential is important. The aim of this study was to compare students' attitudes towards patient-centredness and clinical confidence as they progressed through their medical course, and understand the influence of diverse clinical placement zones.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical education; Community based education; Qualities/skills/values/attitudes
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27421655 PMCID: PMC4946086 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0689-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Survey items in five domains
| Domain | Items | 5-point Likert Scales |
|---|---|---|
| Patient Centred Care | 1. Patients should be treated as if they were partners with the doctor, equal in power and status | 1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree |
| Confidence | 1. Dealing with ethical dilemmas | 1 = Very Unconfident to 5 = Very Confident |
| Role Modelling | 1. I often observed my supervisors communicate concern and interest in patients as unique persons | 1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree |
| Clinical Learning Experience | 1. My clinical supervisors were skilled teachers | 1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree |
Means (and Standard Deviations) of Students’ Clinical Confidence and Patient Centredness at the Beginning and the End of Two Years of Clinical Training
| Domain | Inner metropolitan ( | Outer metropolitan ( | Rural ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time 1 | Time 2 | Time 1 | Time 2 | Time 1 | Time 2 | |
| Clinical confidence | 3.6 (.42) | 3.9 (.40) | 3.6 (.57) | 4.0 (.47) | 3.6 (.51) | 4.0 (.43) |
| Patient centredness | 4.0 (.39) | 4.0 (.35) | 4.0 (.36) | 4.0 (.41) | 4.0 (.35) | 3.9 (.35) |
Influences encouraging patient-centred care
| Positive experiences | Negative experiences | |
|---|---|---|
| Role modelling | “My Supervisor/mentor had a real emphasis on patient-centred care that will stay with me for the rest of my career.” (#127, male, inner metropolitan) | “The complete lack of patient centred care at the hospital has inspired me to do the opposite.” (#202, male, inner metropolitan) |
| “GP especially was good for this (understanding PCC). My GP was great at collaborating with his patients regarding the best care for them.” (#83, female, inner metropolitan) | “Hospital is not patient centred” #131, female, rural) | |
| Direct teaching | “Great teachers always make a point of this (patient-centred care) and it is important to always be aware of the whole person.” (#39, female, rural) | “We were told how patient centred care improves outcomes, but never how to actually practice it or given any opportunities to practice.” (#126, male, inner metropolitan) |
| Practising | “Especially during GP rotation. I’ve seen the same patient quite a few times and built a rapport which made me think about patient-centred care.” (#118, male, inner metropolitan) | “I have learned a lot about patients’ perceptions from interactions with them and often things that I end up having to tell the doctors because the doctor didn’t ask.” (#6, female, outer metropolitan) |