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How can the perceptions and experiences of medical educator stakeholders inform selection into medicine? An interpretative phenomenological pilot study

Version 2 2024-06-15, 01:57
Version 1 2024-05-14, 23:26
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-15, 01:57 authored by Marise Lombard, Arthur Poropat, Louise Alldridge, Gary RogersGary Rogers
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. BackgroundAttempts to utilise the experiences of stakeholders to better inform selection into medicine are rare in the literature. Published scholarship to date reflects a myriad of competing goals for selecting and graduating 'good doctors' amidst increasingly complex health care environments. This includes debates around what is the 'good doctor', selection methods, health care decision-making, the doctor-patient relationship, patient-centredness, professionalism and stakeholder experiences with doctors. Within the complexity manifested by these multiple dimensions, decisions about the characteristics and capabilities on which selection should be based may have privileged some stakeholder groups over others, with patient experiences particularly de-emphasised. The aims of this pilot study were to focus on front-line medical educators as stakeholders whose experiences might be valuable for informing selection into medicine and to inform a larger-scale study of the topic from the perspectives of a more diverse group of stakeholders, including patients.MethodFourteen (14) medical educator participants were recruited for a semi-structured group interview at an international conference for health professional educators. The audio-recording was transcribed verbatim and the raw data were de-identified and organised with the aid of computer assisted data analysis software. Coding was initiated and Smith's interpretative phenomenological analytical (IPA) method employed (Smith, Flowers, & Larkin, 2009).ResultsInitial analysis yielded four broad phenomenological themes: perceptions of 'good doctors', selection processes, selection-related challenges and possible solutions. The more deeply experiential data were captured in an analytical commentary of first-person accounts that may be useful for informing future selection strategies. Participant experiences mirrored the major debates in medical selection but their accounts revealed a negativity and cynicism about the topic that was concerning and warrants further investigation.ConclusionThis study contributes to medical student selection research through offering an account of the 'lived experiences' of front-line medical educator stakeholders.

History

Journal

MedEdPublish

Volume

7

Pagination

282-282

Location

Scotland

ISSN

2312-7996

eISSN

2312-7996

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

F1000 Research Ltd

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