Family Medicine Supervisors' Preferences for Improving Their Teaching Skills in Senior Care.


Journal

Family medicine
ISSN: 1938-3800
Titre abrégé: Fam Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8306464

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Apr 2021
Historique:
entrez: 22 4 2021
pubmed: 23 4 2021
medline: 19 8 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Many clinical supervisors in family medicine feel ill-equipped to teach senior care to their family medicine residents (trainees). We therefore sought to explore their preferred learning strategies for improving their clinical and teaching skills with regard to senior care. In this qualitative study, we conducted focus groups and interviews with supervisors from four family medicine clinics, to explore their preferred educational strategies. We selected four clinics using a maximum-variation strategy, based on a survey assessing continuing professional development (CPD) needs. The qualitative thematic analysis followed an inductive/deductive approach based on McGuire's attributes of persuasive communication. The four focus groups and nine interviews with 53 supervisors (37 physicians, 9 nurses, 4 psychologists, 1 social worker, 1 nutritionist, 1 sexologist) revealed that supervisors preferred being trained by experienced trainers specialized in senior care, from various professional backgrounds, and knowledgeable about local community resources. They valued practical training the most, such as clinical case discussions based on real cases, clinical tools, and mentoring. The findings also suggest that training in senior care should be adapted to the supervisors' experience, profession, workload, and scope of intervention. Supervisors valued repeated CPD with longitudinal follow-up and easy access to trainers and to up-to-date training content. The findings of this project will allow those who design CPD activities to adapt such activities to the preferences of supervisors, so as to improve their clinical and teaching skills in senior care. This, in turn, may help supervisors to embody an appealing professional role model for learners.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES OBJECTIVE
Many clinical supervisors in family medicine feel ill-equipped to teach senior care to their family medicine residents (trainees). We therefore sought to explore their preferred learning strategies for improving their clinical and teaching skills with regard to senior care.
METHODS METHODS
In this qualitative study, we conducted focus groups and interviews with supervisors from four family medicine clinics, to explore their preferred educational strategies. We selected four clinics using a maximum-variation strategy, based on a survey assessing continuing professional development (CPD) needs. The qualitative thematic analysis followed an inductive/deductive approach based on McGuire's attributes of persuasive communication.
RESULTS RESULTS
The four focus groups and nine interviews with 53 supervisors (37 physicians, 9 nurses, 4 psychologists, 1 social worker, 1 nutritionist, 1 sexologist) revealed that supervisors preferred being trained by experienced trainers specialized in senior care, from various professional backgrounds, and knowledgeable about local community resources. They valued practical training the most, such as clinical case discussions based on real cases, clinical tools, and mentoring. The findings also suggest that training in senior care should be adapted to the supervisors' experience, profession, workload, and scope of intervention. Supervisors valued repeated CPD with longitudinal follow-up and easy access to trainers and to up-to-date training content.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
The findings of this project will allow those who design CPD activities to adapt such activities to the preferences of supervisors, so as to improve their clinical and teaching skills in senior care. This, in turn, may help supervisors to embody an appealing professional role model for learners.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33887048
doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2021.171325
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

267-274

Auteurs

Anik M C Giguere (AMC)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Laval University, Quebec.
Quebec Centre for Excellence on Aging.
and VITAM Research Center in Sustainable Health.

Paule Lebel (P)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, University of Montreal, Quebec.

Michèle Morin (M)

Quebec Centre for Excellence on Aging.

Valérie Carnovale (V)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Laval University, Quebec.

Marie Meudec (M)

Quebec Centre for Excellence on Aging.

Charo Rodríguez (C)

McGill University Department of Family Medicine, Montreal, Quebec.

France Légaré (F)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Laval University, Quebec.
VITAM Research Center in Sustainable Health.
and Research Centre of the CHU de Quebec, Quebec.

Louise Champagne (L)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, University of Sherbrooke, Quebec.

Bernard Martineau (B)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, University of Sherbrooke, Quebec.

Phillippe Karazivan (P)

Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, University of Montreal, Quebec.

Pierre J Durand (PJ)

Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Laval University, Quebec.

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Classifications MeSH