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The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology

Background As Radiation Oncology (RO) is a field with limited exposure in undergraduate medical education curricula, the information sources used to form students' perception of the field can have a substantial impact on whether students decide to pursue experiences in RO. Furthermore, the effe...

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Autores principales: MacNevin, Wyatt, Dow, Todd, Rafiq, Rumana, Sun, Margaret Man-Ger, Bowes, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7265768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32499975
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.7931
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author MacNevin, Wyatt
Dow, Todd
Rafiq, Rumana
Sun, Margaret Man-Ger
Bowes, David
author_facet MacNevin, Wyatt
Dow, Todd
Rafiq, Rumana
Sun, Margaret Man-Ger
Bowes, David
author_sort MacNevin, Wyatt
collection PubMed
description Background As Radiation Oncology (RO) is a field with limited exposure in undergraduate medical education curricula, the information sources used to form students' perception of the field can have a substantial impact on whether students decide to pursue experiences in RO. Furthermore, the effects of a single elective experience in RO can strongly influence career decisions as it may serve as the only experience for students to gain an understanding of RO as a specialty. This study analyzes which information sources students use and most strongly value when forming their perception of RO both before and after participating in the program, while also analyzing changes in the perception of various speciality-related factors associated with RO. Methods To address underrepresented specialties, the Pre-clerkship Residency Exploration Program (PREP) was developed to provide students exposure to RO and 13 other specialties through half-day clinical rotations, simulations, skills sessions, and panel discussions. A total of 37 participants completed both “Pre-program” and “Post-program” surveys to evaluate which information sources they use and value most when forming their perception of RO, and student perception of career factors associated with RO was assessed. Results Students reported that Pre-program information sources of RO were based on Lectures (35 students, 94.6%) and Preceptors (18 students, 48.7%). Post-program responses indicated that the greatest sources of information used were from Preceptors (36 students, 97.3%) and Residents (34 students, 91.9%), with the greatest increase being found in interactions with Residents for gaining specialty information (78% increase). Students most highly valued Preceptors, Residents, and Lectures as information sources when forming their perception of RO. Pre-program, students had the greatest positive perception of RO with respect to Income Potential (mean: 3.76/5.00 ± 0.87), Intellectual Challenge (mean: 3.90/5.00 ± 0.94), and Research Opportunities (mean: 3.86/5.00 ± 0.83) while most negatively assessing the factors of Flexibility (mean: 2.69/5.00 ± 0.93) and Level of Stress (mean: 2.93/5.00 ± 0.94). Conclusions Student perception of a medical specialty is a factor that may influence student elective choice and career decisions. Through participating in PREP, significant positive increases were found in students' perception of RO in the areas of Flexibility, Patient Population, Competitiveness of the Specialty, Quality of the Working Environment, and Levels of Stress. This study highlights which information sources students value the most when forming their perception of RO and the impact a single elective experience has on improving student perception of the field. RO-based programs and lectures can be better designed using this information to introduce students to this specialty.
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spelling pubmed-72657682020-06-03 The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology MacNevin, Wyatt Dow, Todd Rafiq, Rumana Sun, Margaret Man-Ger Bowes, David Cureus Medical Education Background As Radiation Oncology (RO) is a field with limited exposure in undergraduate medical education curricula, the information sources used to form students' perception of the field can have a substantial impact on whether students decide to pursue experiences in RO. Furthermore, the effects of a single elective experience in RO can strongly influence career decisions as it may serve as the only experience for students to gain an understanding of RO as a specialty. This study analyzes which information sources students use and most strongly value when forming their perception of RO both before and after participating in the program, while also analyzing changes in the perception of various speciality-related factors associated with RO. Methods To address underrepresented specialties, the Pre-clerkship Residency Exploration Program (PREP) was developed to provide students exposure to RO and 13 other specialties through half-day clinical rotations, simulations, skills sessions, and panel discussions. A total of 37 participants completed both “Pre-program” and “Post-program” surveys to evaluate which information sources they use and value most when forming their perception of RO, and student perception of career factors associated with RO was assessed. Results Students reported that Pre-program information sources of RO were based on Lectures (35 students, 94.6%) and Preceptors (18 students, 48.7%). Post-program responses indicated that the greatest sources of information used were from Preceptors (36 students, 97.3%) and Residents (34 students, 91.9%), with the greatest increase being found in interactions with Residents for gaining specialty information (78% increase). Students most highly valued Preceptors, Residents, and Lectures as information sources when forming their perception of RO. Pre-program, students had the greatest positive perception of RO with respect to Income Potential (mean: 3.76/5.00 ± 0.87), Intellectual Challenge (mean: 3.90/5.00 ± 0.94), and Research Opportunities (mean: 3.86/5.00 ± 0.83) while most negatively assessing the factors of Flexibility (mean: 2.69/5.00 ± 0.93) and Level of Stress (mean: 2.93/5.00 ± 0.94). Conclusions Student perception of a medical specialty is a factor that may influence student elective choice and career decisions. Through participating in PREP, significant positive increases were found in students' perception of RO in the areas of Flexibility, Patient Population, Competitiveness of the Specialty, Quality of the Working Environment, and Levels of Stress. This study highlights which information sources students value the most when forming their perception of RO and the impact a single elective experience has on improving student perception of the field. RO-based programs and lectures can be better designed using this information to introduce students to this specialty. Cureus 2020-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7265768/ /pubmed/32499975 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.7931 Text en Copyright © 2020, MacNevin 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
MacNevin, Wyatt
Dow, Todd
Rafiq, Rumana
Sun, Margaret Man-Ger
Bowes, David
The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology
title The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology
title_full The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology
title_fullStr The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology
title_short The Impact of a Rotating Elective on Medical Students' Perception of Radiation Oncology
title_sort impact of a rotating elective on medical students' perception of radiation oncology
topic Medical Education
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7265768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32499975
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.7931
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