| Literature DB >> 30342513 |
Ariadne A Meiboom1, Henk de Vries2, Fedde Scheele3, Cees M P M Hertogh2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To deliver high quality of care for the growing population of older patients more geriatricians are needed. However, the interest of medical students for a career in geriatrics is lagging behind due to a lack of exposure, the nature of the work, and the low status and financial rewards. So far, only isolated interventions aimed at enhancing interest and/or attitudes with regard to geriatrics have been studied, pointing to the need for a broader-based strategy. The goal of this research is to find elements for a curriculum framework that can raise medical students' enthusiasm for the medical care of elderly patients.Entities:
Keywords: Concept mapping; Curriculum development; Geriatrics; Medical students
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30342513 PMCID: PMC6195977 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-018-1344-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Statements
| Statement number | Statement |
|---|---|
| Cluster 1. It is a patient centered medical curriculum | |
| 2 | Attention for the whole patient is presented as a challenge |
| 4 | Give insight into the limited curative ability of medicine |
| 5 | Insight into preventive possibilities |
| 6 | From cure to care |
| 12 | Insight into the patient population in the hospital |
| 13 | Less profession specific and more towards patient problems |
| 24 | Comorbidity instead of one single diagnosis |
| 34 | Think about social responsibility within the curriculum |
| 35 | Less emphasis on the biomedical paradigm |
| 36 | Start with patient perspective instead of the biomedical |
| Cluster 2. It is a curriculum representative of patient population (substantial amount of geriatrics). | |
| 1 | A balanced curriculum, which is representative for medicine |
| 10 | Continuous exposure to geriatrics throughout the whole curriculum |
| 11 | 70% of medical cases for medical students should consist of elderly patients |
| 14 | Elderly patients are not boring or difficult |
| 22 | Assessment of geriatric content |
| 25 | Death and dying should have a central space in the curriculum |
| 44 | Interdisciplinary education |
| Cluster 3. Geriatrics is presented as intellectually challenging and emotionally appealing. | |
| 7 | The visibility of the scientific challenge of aging |
| 8 | The scientific gap that is there to discover is a great challenge |
| 17 | Promotion of the field by prestigious individuals and by medical specialists |
| 18 | The involvement of own family and loved ones within the curriculum |
| 19 | Creating empathy by more exposure to older people within the curriculum |
| 20 | Making use of current affairs or spectacular topics |
| 21 | Bringing the message that geriatrics is exclusive and for the very talented |
| 27 | The geriatric clerkship should be the best |
| 28 | An award for the most talented student regarding geriatrics |
| 29 | Organizing attractive elements in geriatrics such as e-health or games |
| 30 | Geriatric literature and curriculum have to be of high quality |
| 31 | Intellectually challenging and emotionally appealing |
| 32 | Elderly people as a role model |
| 37 | Making use of reports in the media in the curriculum |
| 38 | Organization of journal clubs |
| 39 | A separate compulsory geriatric clerkship |
| Cluster 4. There are senior friendly role models. | |
| 16 | Role models in geriatrics |
| 26 | Early attention to professional identity development during medical school |
| 41 | Acknowledging that some physicians are not elderly minded |
| 42 | Proud teachers |
| 43 | Teacher professionalization on the job |
| Cluster 5. Future professional perspectives are clearly provided. | |
| 3 | It must be clear to medical students who the key players in the field are |
| 9 | Insight into career perspectives |
| 23 | Insight into career perspectives including financial rewards |
| 40 | Helping students in gaining insight into what kind of doctor they want to become |
| Cluster 6. | |
| 15 | Making clear wich treatment options there are |
| 33 | From individual physician to team player(s) |
All statements generated by the participants, sorted through hierarchical cluster analysis
The 10 most important statements of the concept mapping session
| Statement number | Statement | Mean importance |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | continuous exposure to geriatrics throughout the whole curriculum | 4.5 |
| 1 | a balanced curriculum, which is representative for medicine | 4.38 |
| 4 | give insight in the limited curative ability of medicine | 4.38 |
| 17 | promotion of the field by prestigious individuals and by medical specialists | 4.38 |
| 16 | role models in geriatrics | 4.25 |
| 25 | death and dying should have a central place in the curriculum | 4.25 |
| 39 | a separate compulsory geriatric clerkship | 4.14 |
| 21 | geriatrics is exclusive and for the very talented | 4.0 |
| 2 | attention for the whole patient is represented as challenging | 3.75 |
| 6 | from cure to care / searching for the scientific challenge of aging | 3.63 |
Mean statement importance (sorted)
Fig. 1Concept map. Each box is a cluster. The thickness of the red line represents the average rating for that cluster. The thickness of each point represents the average rating for that statement