Literature DB >> 32712596

Experiential learning of overnight home care by medical trainees for professional development: an exploratory study.

Manabu Yoshimura1, Takuya Saiki1, Rintaro Imafuku1, Kazuhiko Fujisaki1, Yasuyuki Suzuki1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: In an ageing society, community-based medical education in a home care setting needs to be developed. Drawing on Kolb's experiential learning theory, this study aimed to explore the learning processes in overnight home care by medical trainees in terms of their understanding of terminally ill patients and their conceptualization of themselves as future physicians.
METHODS: An overnight home care program in which a trainee had to take care of terminally ill patients on his/her own under the supervision of a healthcare team was conducted. Nineteen trainees, including eight medical students and 11 residents, participated in this study. Text data of reflective reports written after the overnight care were collected and thematically analyzed.
RESULTS: The trainees' learning experiences in the program were categorized into four stages: predeparture, concrete experience, reflective observation and abstract conceptualization. Although they had mixed feelings, including anxiety, fear and expectations, at the predeparture stage, they could be actively involved in providing medical care and daily life support and in taking care of dying patients at the patients' homes overnight. By reflecting on their experiences, they gained a sense of achievement and identified the aspects upon which they should improve as future physicians. Subsequently, based on their reflective observation, they conceptualized their approaches to home care and the roles/responsibilities of physicians as healers, which led to professional identity formation.
CONCLUSIONS: Overnight home care by medical trainees has the potential as an educational strategy to promote their realistic understanding of home care and facilitate professional identity formation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  experiential learning; medical trainees; overnight home care; professional identity formation

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32712596      PMCID: PMC7870453          DOI: 10.5116/ijme.5f01.c78f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Educ        ISSN: 2042-6372


  24 in total

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8.  What students experienced: a narrative analysis of essays written by first-year medical students participating in a geriatrics home visit.

Authors:  Linsey O'Donnell; Lesley Carson; Mary Ann Forciea; Bruce Kinosian; Judy Shea; Jean Yudin; Rachel K Miller
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10.  A brief home-based palliative care learning experience for medical students and resident doctors in Okinawa, Japan.

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