Literature DB >> 32404148

Exploring UK medical school differences: the MedDifs study of selection, teaching, student and F1 perceptions, postgraduate outcomes and fitness to practise.

I C McManus1, Andrew Christopher Harborne2, Hugo Layard Horsfall3, Tobin Joseph4, Daniel T Smith5, Tess Marshall-Andon6, Ryan Samuels7, Joshua William Kearsley8, Nadine Abbas9, Hassan Baig10, Joseph Beecham11, Natasha Benons12, Charlie Caird13, Ryan Clark14, Thomas Cope15, James Coultas16, Luke Debenham17, Sarah Douglas18, Jack Eldridge19, Thomas Hughes-Gooding20, Agnieszka Jakubowska21, Oliver Jones22, Eve Lancaster17, Calum MacMillan23, Ross McAllister24, Wassim Merzougui9, Ben Phillips25, Simon Phillips26, Omar Risk27, Adam Sage28, Aisha Sooltangos29, Robert Spencer30, Roxanne Tajbakhsh31, Oluseyi Adesalu7, Ivan Aganin19, Ammar Ahmed32, Katherine Aiken28, Alimatu-Sadia Akeredolu28, Ibrahim Alam10, Aamna Ali31, Richard Anderson6, Jia Jun Ang7, Fady Sameh Anis24, Sonam Aojula7, Catherine Arthur19, Alena Ashby32, Ahmed Ashraf10, Emma Aspinall25, Mark Awad12, Abdul-Muiz Azri Yahaya10, Shreya Badhrinarayanan19, Soham Bandyopadhyay26, Sam Barnes33, Daisy Bassey-Duke12, Charlotte Boreham7, Rebecca Braine26, Joseph Brandreth24, Zoe Carrington32, Zoe Cashin19, Shaunak Chatterjee17, Mehar Chawla11, Chung Shen Chean32, Chris Clements34, Richard Clough7, Jessica Coulthurst32, Liam Curry33, Vinnie Christine Daniels7, Simon Davies7, Rebecca Davis32, Hanelie De Waal19, Nasreen Desai32, Hannah Douglas18, James Druce7, Lady-Namera Ejamike4, Meron Esere26, Alex Eyre7, Ibrahim Talal Fazmin6, Sophia Fitzgerald-Smith12, Verity Ford9, Sarah Freeston35, Katherine Garnett28, Whitney General12, Helen Gilbert7, Zein Gowie9, Ciaran Grafton-Clarke32, Keshni Gudka24, Leher Gumber19, Rishi Gupta4, Chris Harlow3, Amy Harrington9, Adele Heaney28, Wing Hang Serene Ho32, Lucy Holloway7, Christina Hood7, Eleanor Houghton24, Saba Houshangi11, Emma Howard16, Benjamin Human31, Harriet Hunter6, Ifrah Hussain13, Sami Hussain4, Richard Thomas Jackson-Taylor7, Bronwen Jacob-Ramsdale28, Ryan Janjuha11, Saleh Jawad9, Muzzamil Jelani7, David Johnston6, Mike Jones36, Sadhana Kalidindi12, Savraj Kalsi15, Asanish Kalyanasundaram6, Anna Kane7, Sahaj Kaur6, Othman Khaled Al-Othman10, Qaisar Khan10, Sajan Khullar16, Priscilla Kirkland18, Hannah Lawrence-Smith32, Charlotte Leeson11, Julius Elisabeth Richard Lenaerts24, Kerry Long37, Simon Lubbock24, Jamie Mac Donald Burrell18, Rachel Maguire7, Praveen Mahendran32, Saad Majeed10, Prabhjot Singh Malhotra15, Vinay Mandagere12, Angelos Mantelakis3, Sophie McGovern7, Anjola Mosuro12, Adam Moxley7, Sophie Mustoe27, Sam Myers4, Kiran Nadeem29, Reza Nasseri12, Tom Newman6, Richard Nzewi33, Rosalie Ogborne3, Joyce Omatseye32, Sophie Paddock11, James Parkin3, Mohit Patel15, Sohini Pawar6, Stuart Pearce3, Samuel Penrice23, Julian Purdy7, Raisa Ramjan11, Ratan Randhawa4, Usman Rasul10, Elliot Raymond-Taggert12, Rebecca Razey13, Carmel Razzaghi28, Eimear Reel28, Elliot John Revell7, Joanna Rigbye18, Oloruntobi Rotimi4, Abdelrahman Said11, Emma Sanders12, Pranoy Sangal36, Nora Sangvik Grandal15, Aadam Shah10, Rahul Atul Shah6, Oliver Shotton26, Daniel Sims19, Katie Smart11, Martha Amy Smith7, Nick Smith11, Aninditya Salma Sopian7, Matthew South24, Jessica Speller33, Tom J Syer11, Ngan Hong Ta11, Daniel Tadross31, Benjamin Thompson15, Jess Trevett15, Matthew Tyler7, Roshan Ullah17, Mrudula Utukuri6, Shree Vadera4, Harriet Van Den Tooren29, Sara Venturini38, Aradhya Vijayakumar33, Melanie Vine33, Zoe Wellbelove15, Liora Wittner4, Geoffrey Hong Kiat Yong7, Farris Ziyada27, Oliver Patrick Devine4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Medical schools differ, particularly in their teaching, but it is unclear whether such differences matter, although influential claims are often made. The Medical School Differences (MedDifs) study brings together a wide range of measures of UK medical schools, including postgraduate performance, fitness to practise issues, specialty choice, preparedness, satisfaction, teaching styles, entry criteria and institutional factors.
METHOD: Aggregated data were collected for 50 measures across 29 UK medical schools. Data include institutional history (e.g. rate of production of hospital and GP specialists in the past), curricular influences (e.g. PBL schools, spend per student, staff-student ratio), selection measures (e.g. entry grades), teaching and assessment (e.g. traditional vs PBL, specialty teaching, self-regulated learning), student satisfaction, Foundation selection scores, Foundation satisfaction, postgraduate examination performance and fitness to practise (postgraduate progression, GMC sanctions). Six specialties (General Practice, Psychiatry, Anaesthetics, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Internal Medicine, Surgery) were examined in more detail.
RESULTS: Medical school differences are stable across time (median alpha = 0.835). The 50 measures were highly correlated, 395 (32.2%) of 1225 correlations being significant with p < 0.05, and 201 (16.4%) reached a Tukey-adjusted criterion of p < 0.0025. Problem-based learning (PBL) schools differ on many measures, including lower performance on postgraduate assessments. While these are in part explained by lower entry grades, a surprising finding is that schools such as PBL schools which reported greater student satisfaction with feedback also showed lower performance at postgraduate examinations. More medical school teaching of psychiatry, surgery and anaesthetics did not result in more specialist trainees. Schools that taught more general practice did have more graduates entering GP training, but those graduates performed less well in MRCGP examinations, the negative correlation resulting from numbers of GP trainees and exam outcomes being affected both by non-traditional teaching and by greater historical production of GPs. Postgraduate exam outcomes were also higher in schools with more self-regulated learning, but lower in larger medical schools. A path model for 29 measures found a complex causal nexus, most measures causing or being caused by other measures. Postgraduate exam performance was influenced by earlier attainment, at entry to Foundation and entry to medical school (the so-called academic backbone), and by self-regulated learning. Foundation measures of satisfaction, including preparedness, had no subsequent influence on outcomes. Fitness to practise issues were more frequent in schools producing more male graduates and more GPs.
CONCLUSIONS: Medical schools differ in large numbers of ways that are causally interconnected. Differences between schools in postgraduate examination performance, training problems and GMC sanctions have important implications for the quality of patient care and patient safety.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Fitness to practise; GMC sanctions; Institutional histories; Medical school differences; National Student Survey; National Training Study; Postgraduate qualifications; Preparedness; Problem-based learning; Teaching styles

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32404148      PMCID: PMC7222458          DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01572-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Med        ISSN: 1741-7015            Impact factor:   8.775


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