| Literature DB >> 32912234 |
Chunyu Zhang1, Fang Fang1, Mingqiang Peng2, Ying Zhao3, Ruixue Liu3, Cunbo Jia4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In China, general practitioners have limited ability to provide care for common chronic non-communicable diseases because they lack postgraduate training. In an attempt to improve general practitioners' skills in this regard, the present authors previously launched the Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases Training Programme. The present study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of this programme.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic non-communicable diseases; Continued medical education; General practitioner
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32912234 PMCID: PMC7488002 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02226-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
The trainees’ characteristics
| Training field | COPD | Diabetes | Stoke | Hypertension |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 4 (33.3%) | 2(16.7%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) |
| Female | 8(66.7%) | 10(83.3%) | 8(100%) | 7(100%) |
| Age (years) | ||||
| < 30 | 2(16.7%) | 1(8.3%) | 3(37.5%) | 1(14.3%) |
| 30–39 | 8(66.7%) | 8(66.7%) | 4(50.0%) | 6(85.7%) |
| ≥ 40 | 2(16.7%) | 3(25.0%) | 1(12.5%) | 0(0%) |
| Work year | ||||
| ≤ 5 | 3(25.0%) | 2(16.7%) | 4(50.0%) | 2(28.6%) |
| 6–10 | 2(16.7%) | 1(8.3%) | 1(12.5%) | 2(28.6%) |
| > 10 | 7(58.3%) | 9(75.0%) | 3(37.5%) | 3(42.9%) |
| Education background | ||||
| Bachelor’s | 9(75.0%) | 10(83.3%) | 6(75.0%) | 6(85.7%) |
| Master’s | 2(16.7%) | 2(16.7%) | 2(25.0%) | 1(14.3%) |
| Doctorate | 1(8.3%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) |
| Technical rank | ||||
| Junior | 3(25.0%) | 4(33.3%) | 3(37.5%) | 3(42.9%) |
| Medium | 9(75.0%) | 7(58.3%) | 4(50.0%) | 4(51.7%) |
| Senior | 0(0%) | 1(8.3%) | 1(12.5%) | 0(0%) |
| Training model | ||||
| O-I | 4(33.3%) | 3(25.0%) | 2(25.0%) | 5(71.4%) |
| I-O | 5(41.7%) | 1(8.3%) | 0(0%) | 1(14.3%) |
| O-I-O | 3(25.0%) | 8(66.7%) | 6(66.7%) | 1(14.3%) |
| Total | 12 | 12 | 8 | 7 |
O-I: Initially assisting the outpatient consultant, and then practising in the ward
I-O: Initially practising in the ward, and then assisting the outpatient consultant
O-I-O: Initially assisting the outpatient consultant, then practising in the ward, and finally assisting the outpatient consultant again
COPD Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Themes identified
| 1. Type of training the trainee GPs received | |
| 2. Support the trainee GPs received from their supervisors | |
| 3. What the trainee GPs learned from the programme | |
| 4. The current work benefits from the trainee GPs’ training experience | |
| 5. Suggestions for improving the programme |