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Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana

BACKGROUND: Medical internship is the final year of training before independent practice for most doctors in Botswana. Internship training in Botswana faces challenges including variability in participants’ level of knowledge and skill related to their completion of medical school in a variety of se...

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Autores principales: Peluso, Michael J., Tapela, Neo, Langeveldt, John, Williams, Margaret E., Mochankana, Kagiso, Motseosi, Kebonye, Ricci, Brian, Rodman, Adam, Haverkamp, Cecil, Haverkamp, Miriam, Maoto, Rosa, Luckett, Rebecca, Prozesky, Detlef, Nkomazana, Oathokwa, Barak, Tomer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Levy Library Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6748212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30873812
http://dx.doi.org/10.29024/aogh.22
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author Peluso, Michael J.
Tapela, Neo
Langeveldt, John
Williams, Margaret E.
Mochankana, Kagiso
Motseosi, Kebonye
Ricci, Brian
Rodman, Adam
Haverkamp, Cecil
Haverkamp, Miriam
Maoto, Rosa
Luckett, Rebecca
Prozesky, Detlef
Nkomazana, Oathokwa
Barak, Tomer
author_facet Peluso, Michael J.
Tapela, Neo
Langeveldt, John
Williams, Margaret E.
Mochankana, Kagiso
Motseosi, Kebonye
Ricci, Brian
Rodman, Adam
Haverkamp, Cecil
Haverkamp, Miriam
Maoto, Rosa
Luckett, Rebecca
Prozesky, Detlef
Nkomazana, Oathokwa
Barak, Tomer
author_sort Peluso, Michael J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medical internship is the final year of training before independent practice for most doctors in Botswana. Internship training in Botswana faces challenges including variability in participants’ level of knowledge and skill related to their completion of medical school in a variety of settings (both foreign and domestic), lack of planned curricular content, and limited time for structured educational activities. Data on trainees’ opinions regarding the content and delivery of graduate medical education in settings like Botswana are limited, which makes it difficult to revise programs in a learner-centered way. OBJECTIVE: To understand the perceptions and experiences of a group of medical interns in Botswana, in order to inform a large curriculum initiative. METHODS: We conducted a targeted needs assessment using structured interviews at one district hospital. The interview script included demographic, quantitative, and free- response questions. Fourteen interns were asked their opinions about the content and format of structured educational activities, and provided feedback on the preferred characteristics of a new curriculum. Descriptive statistics were calculated. FINDINGS: In the current curriculum, training workshops were the highest-scored teaching format, although most interns preferred lectures overall. Specialists were rated as the most useful teachers, and other interns and medical officers were rated as average. Interns felt they had adequate exposure to content such as HIV and tuberculosis, but inadequate exposure to areas including medical emergencies, non-communicable diseases, pain management, procedural skills, X-ray and EKG interpretation, disclosing medical information, and identifying career goals. For the new curriculum, interns preferred a structured case discussion format, and a focus on clinical reasoning and procedural skills. CONCLUSIONS: This needs assessment identified several foci for development, including a shift toward interactive sessions focused on skill development, the need to empower interns and medical officers to improve teaching skills, and the value of shifting curricular content to mirror the epidemiologic transition occurring in Botswana. Interns’ input is being used to initiate a large curriculum intervention that will be piloted and scaled nationally over the next several years. Our results underscore the value of seeking the opinion of trainees, both to aid educators in building programs that serve them and in empowering them to direct their education toward their needs and goals.
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spelling pubmed-67482122019-09-17 Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana Peluso, Michael J. Tapela, Neo Langeveldt, John Williams, Margaret E. Mochankana, Kagiso Motseosi, Kebonye Ricci, Brian Rodman, Adam Haverkamp, Cecil Haverkamp, Miriam Maoto, Rosa Luckett, Rebecca Prozesky, Detlef Nkomazana, Oathokwa Barak, Tomer Ann Glob Health Original Research BACKGROUND: Medical internship is the final year of training before independent practice for most doctors in Botswana. Internship training in Botswana faces challenges including variability in participants’ level of knowledge and skill related to their completion of medical school in a variety of settings (both foreign and domestic), lack of planned curricular content, and limited time for structured educational activities. Data on trainees’ opinions regarding the content and delivery of graduate medical education in settings like Botswana are limited, which makes it difficult to revise programs in a learner-centered way. OBJECTIVE: To understand the perceptions and experiences of a group of medical interns in Botswana, in order to inform a large curriculum initiative. METHODS: We conducted a targeted needs assessment using structured interviews at one district hospital. The interview script included demographic, quantitative, and free- response questions. Fourteen interns were asked their opinions about the content and format of structured educational activities, and provided feedback on the preferred characteristics of a new curriculum. Descriptive statistics were calculated. FINDINGS: In the current curriculum, training workshops were the highest-scored teaching format, although most interns preferred lectures overall. Specialists were rated as the most useful teachers, and other interns and medical officers were rated as average. Interns felt they had adequate exposure to content such as HIV and tuberculosis, but inadequate exposure to areas including medical emergencies, non-communicable diseases, pain management, procedural skills, X-ray and EKG interpretation, disclosing medical information, and identifying career goals. For the new curriculum, interns preferred a structured case discussion format, and a focus on clinical reasoning and procedural skills. CONCLUSIONS: This needs assessment identified several foci for development, including a shift toward interactive sessions focused on skill development, the need to empower interns and medical officers to improve teaching skills, and the value of shifting curricular content to mirror the epidemiologic transition occurring in Botswana. Interns’ input is being used to initiate a large curriculum intervention that will be piloted and scaled nationally over the next several years. Our results underscore the value of seeking the opinion of trainees, both to aid educators in building programs that serve them and in empowering them to direct their education toward their needs and goals. Levy Library Press 2018-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6748212/ /pubmed/30873812 http://dx.doi.org/10.29024/aogh.22 Text en Copyright: © 2018 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Peluso, Michael J.
Tapela, Neo
Langeveldt, John
Williams, Margaret E.
Mochankana, Kagiso
Motseosi, Kebonye
Ricci, Brian
Rodman, Adam
Haverkamp, Cecil
Haverkamp, Miriam
Maoto, Rosa
Luckett, Rebecca
Prozesky, Detlef
Nkomazana, Oathokwa
Barak, Tomer
Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana
title Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana
title_full Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana
title_fullStr Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana
title_full_unstemmed Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana
title_short Building Health System Capacity through Medical Education: A Targeted Needs Assessment to Guide Development of a Structured Internal Medicine Curriculum for Medical Interns in Botswana
title_sort building health system capacity through medical education: a targeted needs assessment to guide development of a structured internal medicine curriculum for medical interns in botswana
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6748212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30873812
http://dx.doi.org/10.29024/aogh.22
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