Students’ hopes and fears about early patient contact: Lessons to be learned about preparing and supporting students during the first year
- 22 January 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Medical Teacher
- Vol. 32 (1), e24-e30
- https://doi.org/10.3109/01421590903199700
Abstract
Medical students increasingly have contact with real patients ('early patient contact', EPC) from the beginning of their first year. Little is known about their expectations of meeting patients at this time. Understanding their hopes and fears might usefully influence the design and delivery of EPC. To explore students' views of EPC before arrival at medical school and the impact of EPC on them after 1 year. A two-part study comprising a pre-registration questionnaire, with open-ended questions, sent to the complete year group, and four focus groups conducted after 1 year with randomly selected students. Students anticipated benefits from EPC, especially in promoting personal and professional development. After 1 year most of their hopes were realized. They feared feeling inadequate and doing harm to patients or themselves. Fears were reinforced when students felt underprepared, were not made welcome on hospital wards and treated disrespectfully by some staff. Understanding how students anticipate meeting patients for the first time is crucial to maximize the educational potential of EPC. Students' preparation for EPC and the organization of these real patient encounters are of paramount importance in determining to what extent their hopes and fears are realized and their consequent learning.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Teaching professionalism in the early years of a medical curriculum: a qualitative studyMedical Education, 2007
- What is medicine and what is a doctor? Medical students’ perceptions and expectations of their academic and professional careerMedical Teacher, 2007
- Students’ perceptions of early patient encounters in a PBL curriculum: A first evaluation of the Maastricht experienceMedical Teacher, 2007
- A survey of UK medical schools' arrangements for early patient contactMedical Teacher, 2007
- Early practical experience and the social responsiveness of clinical education: systematic reviewBMJ, 2005
- What every teacher needs to know about clinical reasoningMedical Education, 2005
- What can experience add to early medical education? Consensus surveyBMJ, 2004
- The hidden curriculum in undergraduate medical education: qualitative study of medical students' perceptions of teachingBMJ, 2004
- Pros and cons of vertical integration between clinical medicine and basic science within a problem-based undergraduate medical curriculum: examples and experiences from Linköping, SwedenMedical Teacher, 2002
- Beyond curriculum reformAcademic Medicine, 1998