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Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training

Objective: Physician shadowing has become ubiquitous to the premedical experience. However, students without connections to a medical professional are oftentimes forced to reach out to physicians independently from a program. Subsequently, these inquiries may go unanswered as they oftentimes appear...

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Autores principales: Thang, Christine, Barnette, Natalie M, Patel, Kunal S, Duong, Courtney, Dejam, Dillon, Yang, Isaac, Lee, James H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6961790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31942265
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.6396
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author Thang, Christine
Barnette, Natalie M
Patel, Kunal S
Duong, Courtney
Dejam, Dillon
Yang, Isaac
Lee, James H
author_facet Thang, Christine
Barnette, Natalie M
Patel, Kunal S
Duong, Courtney
Dejam, Dillon
Yang, Isaac
Lee, James H
author_sort Thang, Christine
collection PubMed
description Objective: Physician shadowing has become ubiquitous to the premedical experience. However, students without connections to a medical professional are oftentimes forced to reach out to physicians independently from a program. Subsequently, these inquiries may go unanswered as they oftentimes appear unsolicited. The primary goals in the design and development of our program were to increase access to a clinical observership experience at our academic institution utilizing resident physicians as primary supervisors. Methods: In January 2017, the Educational Shadowing Program (ESP) was established at our institution wherein undergraduate students could shadow within the Pediatric Continuity Clinic (PCC) staffed by pediatric resident physicians. ESP undergraduates shadowed the residents as they performed their history taking and physical exams and as they presented their patients to the attending physicians. Between patient encounters, the students assisted the residents in their administrative work which was completed as needed. ESP students were surveyed at their first orientation meeting and during the final case conference. Results: The pre-participation survey showed that none of the student participants strongly agreed to having a good understanding of what the job of a resident physician entails. By the end of their 30 weeks, the proportion of participants with a strongly perceived understanding increased significantly. The proportion of student respondents that strongly agreed with their understanding of the physician-patient interaction also improved significantly over the study period, from 33% to 78%. Seventy-two percent of the residents surveyed agreed or strongly agreed that they enjoyed having the undergraduates in the clinic, affirming the positive effects of the program on the resident physicians. Forty-five percent of residents agreed or strongly agreed that the undergraduates improved their workflow in the clinic. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that establishing an undergraduate shadowing program in a busy academic pediatric clinic that involves resident physicians can be an overall positive experience for all participants. Fostering premedical student interest in pediatric care and primary care can possibly lead to more physician commitment to these fields, potentially helping to alleviate impending physicians in these specialties.
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spelling pubmed-69617902020-01-15 Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training Thang, Christine Barnette, Natalie M Patel, Kunal S Duong, Courtney Dejam, Dillon Yang, Isaac Lee, James H Cureus Medical Education Objective: Physician shadowing has become ubiquitous to the premedical experience. However, students without connections to a medical professional are oftentimes forced to reach out to physicians independently from a program. Subsequently, these inquiries may go unanswered as they oftentimes appear unsolicited. The primary goals in the design and development of our program were to increase access to a clinical observership experience at our academic institution utilizing resident physicians as primary supervisors. Methods: In January 2017, the Educational Shadowing Program (ESP) was established at our institution wherein undergraduate students could shadow within the Pediatric Continuity Clinic (PCC) staffed by pediatric resident physicians. ESP undergraduates shadowed the residents as they performed their history taking and physical exams and as they presented their patients to the attending physicians. Between patient encounters, the students assisted the residents in their administrative work which was completed as needed. ESP students were surveyed at their first orientation meeting and during the final case conference. Results: The pre-participation survey showed that none of the student participants strongly agreed to having a good understanding of what the job of a resident physician entails. By the end of their 30 weeks, the proportion of participants with a strongly perceived understanding increased significantly. The proportion of student respondents that strongly agreed with their understanding of the physician-patient interaction also improved significantly over the study period, from 33% to 78%. Seventy-two percent of the residents surveyed agreed or strongly agreed that they enjoyed having the undergraduates in the clinic, affirming the positive effects of the program on the resident physicians. Forty-five percent of residents agreed or strongly agreed that the undergraduates improved their workflow in the clinic. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that establishing an undergraduate shadowing program in a busy academic pediatric clinic that involves resident physicians can be an overall positive experience for all participants. Fostering premedical student interest in pediatric care and primary care can possibly lead to more physician commitment to these fields, potentially helping to alleviate impending physicians in these specialties. Cureus 2019-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6961790/ /pubmed/31942265 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.6396 Text en Copyright © 2019, Thang et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Medical Education
Thang, Christine
Barnette, Natalie M
Patel, Kunal S
Duong, Courtney
Dejam, Dillon
Yang, Isaac
Lee, James H
Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training
title Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training
title_full Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training
title_fullStr Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training
title_full_unstemmed Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training
title_short Association of Shadowing Program for Undergraduate Premedical Students with Improvements in Understanding Medical Education and Training
title_sort association of shadowing program for undergraduate premedical students with improvements in understanding medical education and training
topic Medical Education
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6961790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31942265
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.6396
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