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Ashby Wu posted an update 1 day, 8 hours ago
We also demonstrate that learner satisfaction has little or no value as a measure of educational efficacy.
Our data demonstrate differences between commitment to change and educational format that could inform how format types might be better used to promote a behavior change. We also demonstrate that learner satisfaction has little or no value as a measure of educational efficacy.
Evidence of novice mentoring’s successes in having senior clinicians support junior doctors and/or medical students in their clinical, academic, and research goals has spurred efforts to include mentoring in the core medical curriculum. However, lack of effective structuring threatens the viability of mentoring programs, precipitating ethical concerns about mentoring. This review aims to answer the question “what is known about mentoring structures in novice mentoring among medical students and junior doctors in medicine and surgery postings?,” which will guide the design of a consistent structure to novice mentoring.
Levac (2010)’s framework was used to guide this systematic scoping review of mentoring programs in medicine and surgery published between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2019 in PubMed, ScienceDirect, ERIC, Embase, Scopus, Mednar, and OpenGrey. A “split approach” involving concurrent independent use of a directed content analysis and thematic approach was used to analyze included articles.
lancing” flexibility and consistency in mentoring processes. The Generic Mentoring Framework is reliant upon appropriate, holistic, and longitudinal assessments of the mentoring process to guide adaptations to mentoring processes and ensure effective support and oversight of the program.
Health professionals have many facets to their educational role. Although the teaching and student support dimensions of health professionals’ educational role are highly visible in the literature, other nontraditional elements are not. This study presents a broader conceptualization of health professionals’ educational role, with a focus on the strategic dimensions of their role.
Participants were health professionals from different clinical backgrounds and teaching settings, with a formal role in education. Data were collected using a survey (n = 41) and interviews (n = 9), and this article focuses on reporting the qualitative findings of this study. Thematic analysis was used for data interpretation.
Health professionals have three strategic dimensions to their educational role. SHP099 The first strategic dimension is educational advocacy, which is aimed at championing education at different levels and parts of the educational system and building educational capacity. The second strategic dimension is educational quality improvement which is focused on shifting narratives around education and educational change in health service settings and leveraging educational evidence. The final strategic dimension is educational brokerage which is oriented at connecting clinical and educational communities and building trust and consensus.
Beyond the microlevel of learning and teaching, health professionals engage in strategic work that is focused on the broader educational mission within health. Continuing professional development initiatives can empower health professionals to optimize these strategic and system-focused educational roles and responsibilities.
Beyond the microlevel of learning and teaching, health professionals engage in strategic work that is focused on the broader educational mission within health. Continuing professional development initiatives can empower health professionals to optimize these strategic and system-focused educational roles and responsibilities.
A global movement on respectful maternity care has arisen because of widespread accounts of dehumanized maternity care. This article considers the use of a transformative learning approach to highlight patient agency and personhood in health care. An educational intervention using patient narratives was introduced in a maternity unit to foster a culture of listening and responsiveness to women’s voices. This article reports the impact on staff and student learning, empathy, and reflective practice.
A total of 245 interprofessional providers participated in 14 workshops over a 16-month period. Participants represented a range of health professions including medicine, midwifery, nursing, and allied professions. Senior management, administrators, and peer support volunteers also attended. Session sizes ranged from 5 to 60 attendees. The format included documentary-style videos of patient feedback followed by audience discussion. Discussion points were collected and qualitatively analyzed for participants’ crf transformative learning. Staff and students recognized the value of providing respectful, empathic care. Educational interventions highlighting patients’ voices may promote patient autonomy by reducing dehumanization in health care.
The authors sought to identify how physician specialty certification is defined in the North American literature.
A rigorous, established six-stage scoping review framework was used to identify the North American certification literature published between January 2006 and May 2016 relating to physician specialty certification. Data were abstracted using a charting form developed by the study team. Quantitative summary data and qualitative thematic analysis of the purpose of certification were derived from the extracted data.
A two stage screening process identified 88 articles that met predefined criteria. Only 14 of the 88 articles (16%) contained a referenced purpose of certification. Eighteen definitions were identified from these articles. Definitional concepts included lifelong learning and continuous professional development, assessment of competence and performance, performance improvement, public accountability, and professional standing.
Most articles identified in this scoping review did not define certification or describe its purpose or intent. Future studies should provide a definition of certification to further scholarly examination of its intent and effects and inform its further evolution.
Most articles identified in this scoping review did not define certification or describe its purpose or intent. Future studies should provide a definition of certification to further scholarly examination of its intent and effects and inform its further evolution.