描述一所医学院的乡村活动足迹:确定遴选和劳动力分配的优先事项。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Rural and remote health Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-28 DOI:10.22605/RRH8316
Lara Fuller, Jessica Beattie, Vincent L Versace, Gary D Rogers, Matthew R McGrail
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:越来越多的证据表明,从农村社区招聘、培训和留住卫生专业人员的方式正在向 "自己培养 "转变。为实现这一目标,大学需要制定合理的方法,以精确的方式描述其重点关注的地理区域,并利用这些方法从本地区招募学生,评估合作社区的劳动力成果。在澳大利亚,迪肯大学实施了一项农村卫生多学科培训(RHMT)计划,该计划由农村临床学院和大学农村卫生系资助,目的是通过在维多利亚州西部和西南部提供农村临床实习机会,培养研究生卫生人才。我们希望在迪肯大学的医学博士课程中设立一个专门的农村培训流,这一愿望促使我们以一种可用于优先考虑当地学生招生以及评估该地区毕业生劳动力成果的方式来描述我们的 "农村足迹":在澳大利亚,农村学生的选拔一直依赖于澳大利亚统计地理标准偏远地区(ASGS-RA)或修正莫纳什模型(MMM),根据RHMT项目提供的标准定义,为医学课程申请者分配农村背景状况。符合农村背景标准的申请者可以根据全国各地的录取配额或专门的农村分流被任何医学院优先录取。直到最近,对毕业生劳动力成果的评估也一直在使用这些乡村分类,但往往没有提及特定的地理区域。越来越多的国际证据证明了以地方为基础的联系和培训的重要性,医学毕业生更有可能在他们来自的地区或接受过培训的地区工作。为了使大学在招收农村学生时更有策略地将其与特定地理区域的培训结合起来,有必要对农村重点区域进行精确的地理定义,以便在招生过程中加以应用:在努力精确描述农村活动区域的过程中,我们模拟了多个地理框架和其他框架的应用,包括MMM、ASGS-RA、初级医疗保健网络(PHN)、地方政府区域(LGA)、邮政编码和统计区域。很明显,没有一个单一的地理或农村框架能够(1)准确描述我们的活动区域,(2)准确描述我们所期望的劳动力重点,(3)在录取过程中切实可行。我们最终确定了一种定制方法,结合使用 PHN 和 MMM 来实现所需的特定性。本报告提供了一个实例,说明如何准确描述农村活动足迹,并成功地将其用于优先录取来自某一地理区域的学生。报告还分享了有关现有地理衡量标准的优势和局限性的经验教训。报告介绍了精确足迹定义的应用,包括学生招生、地理区域劳动力成果评估、利益相关者关系的益处以及更细致的农村高等教育监测报告的机会。
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Describing a medical school's rural activity footprint: setting selection and workforce distribution priorities.

Context: There is growing evidence supporting a shift towards 'grow your own' approaches to recruiting, training and retaining health professionals from and for rural communities. To achieve this, there is a need for sound methodologies by which universities can describe their area of geographic focus in a precise way that can be utilised to recruit students from their region and evaluate workforce outcomes for partner communities. In Australia, Deakin University operates a Rural Health Multidisciplinary Training (RHMT) program funded Rural Clinical School and University Department of Rural Health, with the purpose of producing a graduate health workforce through the provision of rural clinical placements in western and south-western Victoria. The desire to establish a dedicated Rural Training Stream within Deakin's Doctor of Medicine course acted as a catalyst for us to describe our 'rural footprint' in a way that could be used to prioritise local student recruitment as well as evaluate graduate workforce outcomes specifically for this region.

Issue: In Australia, selection of rural students has relied on the Australian Statistical Geography Standard Remoteness Areas (ASGS-RA) or Modified Monash Model (MMM) to assign rural background status to medical course applicants, based on a standard definition provided by the RHMT program. Applicants meeting rural background criteria may be preferentially admitted to any medical school according to admission quotas or dedicated rural streams across the country. Until recently, evaluations of graduate workforce outcomes have also used these rurality classifications, but often without reference to particular geographic areas. Growing international evidence supports the importance of place-based connection and training, with medical graduates more likely to work in a region that they are from or in which they have trained. For universities to align rural student recruitment more strategically with training in specific geographic areas, there is a need to develop precise geographical definitions of areas of rural focus that can be applied during admissions processes.

Lessons learned: As we strived to describe our rural activity area precisely, we modelled the application of several geographical and other frameworks, including the MMM, ASGS-RA, Primary Healthcare Networks (PHN), Local Government Areas (LGAs), postcodes and Statistical Areas. It became evident that there was no single geographical or rural framework that (1) accurately described our area of activity, (2) accurately described our desired workforce focus, (3) was practical to apply during the admissions process. We ultimately settled on a bespoke approach using a combination of the PHN and MMM to achieve the specificity required. This report provides an example of how a rural activity footprint can be accurately described and successfully employed to prioritise students from a geographical area for course admission. Lessons learned about the strengths and limitations of available geographical measures are shared. Applications of a precise footprint definition are described including student recruitment, evaluation of workforce outcomes for a geographic region, benefits to stakeholder relationships and an opportunity for more nuanced RHMT reporting.

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来源期刊
Rural and remote health
Rural and remote health Rural Health-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
145
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Rural and Remote Health is a not-for-profit, online-only, peer-reviewed academic publication. It aims to further rural and remote health education, research and practice. The primary purpose of the Journal is to publish and so provide an international knowledge-base of peer-reviewed material from rural health practitioners (medical, nursing and allied health professionals and health workers), educators, researchers and policy makers.
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