Purpose: This study explores medical students' perspectives on the key features of ideal supervisor responses to microaggressions targeting clerkship medical students.
Method: This single-institution, qualitative focus group study, based in an interpretivist paradigm, explored clerkship medical students' perceptions in the United States, 2020. During semistructured focus groups, participants discussed 4 microaggression scenarios. The authors employed the framework method of thematic analysis to identify considerations and characteristics of ideal supervisor responses and explored differences in ideal response across microaggression types.
Results: Thirty-nine students participated in 7 focus groups, lasting 80 to 92 minutes per group. Overall, students felt that supervisors' responsibility began before a microaggression occurred, through anticipatory discussions ("pre-brief") with all students to identify preferences. Students felt that effective bystander responses should acknowledge student preferences, patient context, interpersonal dynamics in the room, and the microaggression itself. Microassaults necessitated an immediate response. After a microaggression, students preferred a brief one-on-one check-in with the supervisor to discuss the most supportive next steps including whether further group discussion would be helpful.
Conclusions: Students described that an ideal supervisor bystander response incorporates both student preferences and the microaggression context, which are best revealed through advanced discussion. The authors created the Bystander Microaggression Intervention Guide as a visual representation of the preferred bystander microaggression response based on students' discussions. Effective interventions promote educational safety and shift power dynamics to empower the student target.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000004288 | DOI Listing |
Med Educ
January 2025
The Institute for Education Research, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada.
Introduction: Intraprofessional collaboration between family physicians (FPs) and specialist physicians (SPs) is posited to improve patient outcomes but is hindered by power dynamics. Research informing intraprofessional training on hospital wards often conceptualizes power at an interactional level. However, less is known about how social structures make these power dynamics possible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWork-integrated learning (WIL) is integral to most health disciplines' profession-qualifying degree programs. To analyse the categories, locales and foci of final-year (capstone), health information management professional practice (WIL) placements, 2012-2021, at La Trobe University, Australia. A documentary analysis of 614 placement agency proposals, 2012-2021, interrogated multiple characteristics: agency type, placement (sub-) category (WIL model), project type, agency-required student capabilities, intended learning outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract
December 2024
Department of Family Medicine, Care and Public Health Research Institute (CAPHRI), Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Doctor-patient communication is a core competency in medical education, which requires learners to adapt their communication flexibly to each clinical encounter. Although conceptual learning models exist, information about how skilled communication develops over time is scant. This study aims to unpack this process of communication learning and to identify its facilitators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Dent Educ
February 2025
Division of Oral Rehabilitation, Department of Dental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden.
Background: Degree projects are part of most professional study programmes and correspond to professional and academic requirements. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate factors that influence the quality of student degree projects from a supervisor and student perspective.
Methods: Semi-structured interviews were performed with eight supervisors from the study programme in dentistry at Karolinska Institutet.
Acad Pediatr
November 2024
Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine (J Bowen and LE Herrmann), Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Department of Pediatrics (M Kelleher, B Kinnear, D Schumacher, and LE Herrmann), University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio.
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