Abstract
Background Professionalism is a complex and multifaceted component of medical education. Historically, students have learned about professionalism informally and as part of the hidden curriculum. Currently, professionalism is increasingly prominent in formal curricula, but uncertainty remains regarding optimal professionalism pedagogies. In this study, the authors explored medical students’ exposure to professional topics and considered factors that enabled students to correctly recognize and manage these issues. Methods Convenience sampling was used to recruit medical students from existing clinical attachments at the authors’ hospital. A semi-structured interview format was used to explore participants’ awareness of professional issues within fictional vignettes created using published regulatory guidance. The interview transcripts and interview guide field notes were then analyzed. Results The data suggest that students require a combination of didactic teaching and experiential learning to reliably recognize and manage professional issues. Didactic teaching alone enabled topic recognition, but with uncertainty about management strategies. Experiential learning alone led to erratic recognition of the subject and reliance upon role modeling to guide its management. This work stimulates faculty development to enhance teaching professionalism. Conclusions Undergraduate medical education on professionalism must be introduced into the formal curriculum. Didactic teaching is required to scaffold experiential learning. Failure to do so renders students unable to reliably recognize or manage professional issues encountered in clinical practice. Further research questions were identified to progress this work.
Funder
NHS Lanarkshire Medical Education department
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