Context: Learning outcomes for residency training are defined in competency frameworks such as the CanMEDS framework, which ultimately aim to better prepare residents for their future tasks. Although residents' training relies heavily on learning through participation in the workplace under the supervision of a specialist, it remains unclear how the CanMEDS framework informs practice-based learning and daily interactions between residents and supervisors.
Objectives: This study aimed to explore how the CanMEDS framework informs residents' practice-based training and interactions with supervisors.
Methods: Constructivist grounded theory guided iterative data collection and analyses. Data were collected by direct observations of residents and supervisors, combined with formal and field interviews. We progressively arrived at an explanatory theory by coding and interpreting the data, building provisional theories and through continuous conversations. Data analysis drew on sensitising insights from communities of practice theory, which provided this study with a social learning perspective.
Results: CanMEDS roles occurred in an integrated fashion and usually remained implicit during interactions. The language of CanMEDS was not adopted in clinical practice, which seemed to impede explicit learning interactions. The CanMEDS framework seemed only one of many factors of influence in practice-based training: patient records and other documents were highly influential in daily activities and did not always correspond with CanMEDS roles. Additionally, the position of residents seemed too peripheral to allow them to learn certain aspects of the Health Advocate and Leader roles.
Conclusions: The CanMEDS framework did not really guide supervisors' and residents' practice or interactions. It was not explicitly used as a common language in which to talk about resident performance and roles. Therefore, the extent to which CanMEDS actually helps improve residents' learning trajectories and conversations between residents and supervisors about residents' progress remains questionable. This study highlights the fact that the reification of competency frameworks into the complexity of practice-based learning is not a straightforward exercise.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/medu.13335 | DOI Listing |
Med Teach
December 2024
MacOdrum Library, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada.
The rapid evolution of healthcare, driven by the rise of new health technologies and the growing emphasis on evidence-based care, requires health professionals skilled in assessing and utilizing evidence to support decision-making. Health technology assessments (HTAs), which involve evidence synthesis and appraisal, analysis across various domains, and tailoring evidence to local contexts, can develop these skills. These skills are also part of medical competencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Educ Curric Dev
December 2024
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
The growing demand for medical professionals in undergraduate and graduate/postgraduate medical education to attain comprehensive health training has not abated and necessitates the development of curricula encompassing relevant issues pertaining to clinical practice as well as the educational context. Therefore, diversity in learning activities should be embedded in a teaching curriculum to achieve the required competencies. This includes considering at least the following during the design and analysis of a teaching curriculum: Harden's ten questions to be posed when designing a curriculum; Canadian Medical Education Directives for Specialists (CanMEDS) competency framework which has been approved by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada; 21st-century skills; Diana Laurilliard's conversational framework; and general quality measures to improve diversity in a teaching curriculum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Educ
November 2024
Department of Health Sciences Education, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Background: In South Africa, newly qualified physiotherapists transition to the workplace during community service, often in diverse healthcare settings, attending to patients with complex ailments. The transition is complicated by the shortage of rehabilitation personnel, especially in rural and peri-urban areas. While higher education curricula should prepare students for the workplace, the roles and expectations of new therapists remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther
October 2024
Evid Based Nurs
August 2024
College of Nursing, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
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