Operationalising generalism in medical education: a narrative review of international policy and mission documents.

IF 1.5 Q3 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE Education for Primary Care Pub Date : 2023-12-19 DOI:10.1080/14739879.2023.2275262
Agalya Ramanathan, Nicola Clarke, Madeleine Foster, Lindsey Pope, Nigel Hart, Sarah Cheung, Martina Kelly, Sophie Park
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Abstract

Introduction: Despite moves across medical education to increase learning of generalist principles, a lack of clarity about what generalism means and how we should train doctors as 'generalists', has remained. This study explores how international, undergraduate and postgraduate, policy and educational mission documents characterise the practice and learning of generalism and how this can inform physician training.

Methods: A narrative literature review was conducted based on policy and mission documents identified through grey literature searches and a wider systematic review looking at empirical texts. Texts published between 1999 and present and related to 'generalism' were eligible for inclusion. Texts were coded and codes were reviewed and grouped into key themes.

Results: Thirty-four documents were included. Definitions vary: some described generalism as a basic skill, whilst others emphasised expertise. Factors which support learning generalism include: favourable financial outcomes; ageing populations; coordination of multidisciplinary care; demand for doctors with transferable skills; and patient expectations. Barriers to learning about generalism include: preference for specialisation; structure of undergraduate teaching and assessment; and the hidden curriculum. Solutions may include re-imagining generalists and specialists as being on a continuum as well as increasing exposure throughout medical education.

Discussion: Whilst generalism is consistently positioned as valuable, less clarity exists about how best to operationalise this in medical education. Fundamental ideological and structural changes within teaching curricula and assessment, are necessary to improve generalist learning and to promote sustainable practice. Medical education needs careful, considered planning to ensure workforce expertise is meeting population needs.

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医学教育中通用性的操作化:对国际政策和任务文件的叙述性回顾。
导言:尽管整个医学教育都在努力加强通才原则的学习,但对于通才的含义以及我们应该如何将医生培养成 "通才",仍然缺乏明确的认识。本研究探讨了国际、本科生和研究生的政策和教育使命文件如何描述通才的实践和学习,以及如何为医生培训提供信息:方法:根据通过灰色文献检索确定的政策和使命文件,以及对经验性文本进行的更广泛的系统性审查,进行了叙述性文献审查。1999年至今出版的与 "通才 "相关的文献均可纳入。对文本进行了编码,对编码进行了审查,并将其归纳为关键主题:结果:共纳入 34 篇文献。定义各不相同:一些文献将通才描述为一种基本技能,而另一些则强调专业知识。支持学习通才的因素包括:有利的财务结果;人口老龄化;多学科护理的协调;对具有可转换技能的医生的需求;以及患者的期望。学习通才的障碍包括:对专业化的偏好;本科教学和评估结构;隐性课程。解决方案可能包括重新认识全科医生和专科医生的连续性,以及在整个医学教育过程中增加对他们的接触:虽然通才一直被认为是有价值的,但在医学教育中如何最好地实现这一点却不太明确。要改善通才学习和促进可持续实践,就必须从根本上改变教学课程和评估的意识形态和结构。医学教育需要认真、周密的规划,以确保人才队伍的专业知识能够满足人口的需求。
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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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