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Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery

BACKGROUND: Ambulatory care (AC) experiences within medical education are garnering increasing attention. We sought to understand how faculty and residents’ describe their experiences of AC and ambulatory care education (ACEduc) within, between, and across disciplinary contexts. METHODS: We designed...

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Autores principales: Veinot, Paula, Lin, William, Woods, Nicole, Ng, Stella
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: University of Calgary, Health Sciences Centre 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5661737/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29098047
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author Veinot, Paula
Lin, William
Woods, Nicole
Ng, Stella
author_facet Veinot, Paula
Lin, William
Woods, Nicole
Ng, Stella
author_sort Veinot, Paula
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ambulatory care (AC) experiences within medical education are garnering increasing attention. We sought to understand how faculty and residents’ describe their experiences of AC and ambulatory care education (ACEduc) within, between, and across disciplinary contexts. METHODS: We designed a Stakian collective case study, applying constructivist grounded theory analytic methods. Using purposive and snowball sampling, we interviewed 17 faculty and residents across three instrumental cases: family medicine, psychiatry, surgery. Through constant comparative analysis, we identified patterns within, between, and across cases. RESULTS: Family medicine and psychiatry saw AC as an inherent part of continuous, longitudinal care; surgery equated AC with episodic experiences in clinic, differentiating it from operating. Across cases, faculty and residents cautiously valued ACEduc, and in particular, considered it important to develop non-medical expert competencies (e.g., communication). However, surgery residents described AC and ACEduc as less interesting and a lower priority than operating. Educational structures mediated these views. CONCLUSION: Differences between cases highlight a need for further study, as universal assumptions about ACEduc’s purposes and approaches may need to be tempered by situated, contextually-rich perspectives. How disciplinary culture, program structure, and systemic structure influence ACEduc warrant further consideration as does the educational potential for explicitly framing learners’ perspectives.
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spelling pubmed-56617372017-11-02 Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery Veinot, Paula Lin, William Woods, Nicole Ng, Stella Can Med Educ J Major Contributions BACKGROUND: Ambulatory care (AC) experiences within medical education are garnering increasing attention. We sought to understand how faculty and residents’ describe their experiences of AC and ambulatory care education (ACEduc) within, between, and across disciplinary contexts. METHODS: We designed a Stakian collective case study, applying constructivist grounded theory analytic methods. Using purposive and snowball sampling, we interviewed 17 faculty and residents across three instrumental cases: family medicine, psychiatry, surgery. Through constant comparative analysis, we identified patterns within, between, and across cases. RESULTS: Family medicine and psychiatry saw AC as an inherent part of continuous, longitudinal care; surgery equated AC with episodic experiences in clinic, differentiating it from operating. Across cases, faculty and residents cautiously valued ACEduc, and in particular, considered it important to develop non-medical expert competencies (e.g., communication). However, surgery residents described AC and ACEduc as less interesting and a lower priority than operating. Educational structures mediated these views. CONCLUSION: Differences between cases highlight a need for further study, as universal assumptions about ACEduc’s purposes and approaches may need to be tempered by situated, contextually-rich perspectives. How disciplinary culture, program structure, and systemic structure influence ACEduc warrant further consideration as does the educational potential for explicitly framing learners’ perspectives. University of Calgary, Health Sciences Centre 2017-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5661737/ /pubmed/29098047 Text en © 2017 Veinot, Lin, Woods, Ng; licensee Synergies Partners This is an Open Journal Systems article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Major Contributions
Veinot, Paula
Lin, William
Woods, Nicole
Ng, Stella
Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
title Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
title_full Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
title_fullStr Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
title_full_unstemmed Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
title_short Faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: A collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
title_sort faculty and resident perspectives on ambulatory care education: a collective case study of family medicine, psychiatry, and surgery
topic Major Contributions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5661737/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29098047
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