AI Article Synopsis

  • A mentorship scheme was established to enhance medical students' exposure to surgery by pairing them with local surgeons, aiming to improve their understanding and insight into surgical careers.
  • Evaluation of the program, which involved 35 surgeons and 37 students, showed significant increases in students' confidence and hands-on experience in surgery, with 81% focusing on research and 67% seeking theatre experience.
  • Results indicated that 95% of participants would recommend the scheme, highlighting its effectiveness in supporting students in pursuing surgical careers and supplementing their medical education.

Article Abstract

Background: Exposure to surgery during medical school is limited. We ran a mentorship scheme pairing students at a medical school with local surgeons to improve undergraduate insight. We evaluated the effectiveness of mentorship in increasing surgical exposure and drivers for students seeking surgical mentorship.

Methods: 35 surgeons across 7 specialties were recruited and matched with 37 students in years 2-4 for 7 months. Quantitative and qualitative evaluation was done with pre-, mid- and post-scheme questionnaires. Students rated confidence across pursuing a career in surgery, surgical exposure, career insight, understanding the application process, contacts, portfolio development, research knowledge and pursuing extra-curricular activities related to surgery using a 5-point Likert scale. Paired t-tests were performed to measure students' confidence before and after the scheme.

Results: Of students that completed all 3 questionnaires (n = 21), conducting research/audit was most frequently selected as a main goal (81.0%), followed by theatre experience (66.7%) and career progression support (28.6%). The number of students that had assisted in theatre increased by 50.0%. Confidence ratings across all domains increased with 7/8 (87.5%) exhibiting a statistically significant improvement (p < 0.05). The greatest improvement was seen in having adequate contacts in surgery from 2.05 to 3.33 (p = 0.00). 95.2% would recommend the scheme.

Conclusions: Students gained significantly more surgical experience and were better equipped with the knowledge required to pursue a surgical career. Mentorship schemes are invaluable in supplementing the undergraduate curriculum and empowering students.

Trial Registration: Ethical clearance granted by King's College London Research Ethics Committee, Reference Number MRSU-22/23-34530. .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11468475PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12909-024-06047-0DOI Listing

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