Abstract

Domestic abuse (DA) is a prevalent problem in today’s society; over 2.4 million adults in England and Wales experienced DA in 2019 A multi-disciplinary team developed an online FT exercise, which involved a simulated consultation between a GP and DA victim. Spectators are invited to take the place of an actor or guide the actor and decide what action to take, thus helping to change the outcome of the scene. A qualitative approach was conducted, involving hermeneutic phenomenology, to explore participants’ lived experience of the FT exercise. Following the online FT experience, medical students were interviewed, and interview transcripts were analysed using a template analysis approach.Five themes were developed through our analytical process: (1) ‘Almost being there…but not quite’: the realistic experience of FT; (2) ‘Taken on an emotional journey’; (3) ‘Opening and controlling a privileged space’; (4) ‘Small things matter…’: cultivating and maintaining rapport and (5) critically reflecting on future professional self.This study provides an in-depth view of a medical student’s experience of online FT. Online FT has the potential to provide a novel DA teaching method for medical students. By providing students with a unique opportunity to step into a GP’s shoes in a DA consultation, students can practice how they will handle a DA scenario, without any potential consequences, helping them to improve their consultation skills.

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