Essential workers? An institutional ethnographic lens on pandemic GP placements.

IF 1.5 Q3 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE Education for Primary Care Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.1080/14739879.2023.2182715
Grainne P Kearney, Helen Reid, Nigel D Hart
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Abstract

Background: Clinical placements for medical students in the United Kingdom (UK) came to an abrupt halt in March 2020. The rapidly evolving Covid19 pandemic created specific challenges for educators, balancing safety concerns for patients, students and healthcare staff alongside the imperative to continue to train future clinicians. Organisations such as the Medical Schools Council (MSC) published guidance to help plan return of students to clinical placements. This study aimed to examine how GP education leads made decisions around students returning to clinical placements for the 20/21 academic year.

Method: Data collection and analysis was informed by an Institutional Ethnographic approach. Five GP education leads from medical schools throughout the UK were interviewed (over MS TEAMS™). Interviews focused on the work the participants did to plan students' return to clinical placements and how they used texts to inform this work. Analysis focused on the interplay between the interview and textual data.

Results and discussion: GP education leads actively used MSC guidance which confirmed students to be 'essential workers', an unquestioned and unquestionable phrase at the time. This permitted students to return to clinical placements by affording the GP education leads authority to ask or persuade GP tutors to accept them. Furthermore, by describing teaching as 'essential work' in its own right in the guidance, this extended what the GP tutors came to expect to do as 'essential workers' themselves.

Conclusion: GP education leads activated authoritarian phrases such as 'essential workers' and 'essential work' contained within MSC guidance to direct students' return to clinical placements in GP settings.

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必要的工人吗?流行病GP安置的制度性人种学视角。
背景:2020年3月,英国医科学生的临床实习突然停止。快速发展的covid - 19大流行给教育工作者带来了具体的挑战,既要平衡患者、学生和医护人员的安全问题,又要继续培训未来的临床医生。医学院理事会(MSC)等组织发布了指导意见,帮助计划学生重返临床实习。本研究旨在研究全科医生教育领导如何在学生返回临床实习的20/21学年做出决定。方法:采用制度人种学方法进行数据收集和分析。来自英国各地医学院的五位全科医生教育负责人接受了采访(通过MS TEAMS™)。访谈的重点是参与者为计划学生返回临床实习所做的工作,以及他们如何使用文本来告知这项工作。分析的重点是访谈和文本数据之间的相互作用。结果和讨论:GP教育领导积极使用MSC指导,确认学生是“必不可少的工人”,这是当时毋庸置疑的短语。此外,通过在指导中将教学描述为“基本工作”,这扩展了GP导师作为“基本工作者”自己的期望。结论:全科医生教育导致激活权威短语,如“基本工作者”和“基本工作”包含在MSC指导中,以指导学生返回全科医生设置的临床实习。
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来源期刊
Education for Primary Care
Education for Primary Care PRIMARY HEALTH CARE-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
15.40%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: Education for Primary Care aims to reflect the best experience, expertise and innovative ideas in the development of undergraduate, postgraduate and continuing primary care education. The journal is UK based but welcomes contributions from all over the world. Readers will benefit from the broader perspectives on educational activities provided through the contributions of all health professionals, including general practitioners, nurses, midwives, health visitors, community nurses and managers. This sharing of experiences has the potential for enhancing healthcare delivery and for promoting interprofessional working.
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