Abstract

Abstract Aim A UK teaching hospital expanded their established education fellow programme to the General Surgery department to assist with departmental teaching of third-year medical students from the affiliated medical school on clinical placement. Teaching on ward rounds, bedside teaching and clinical tutorials were three areas identified as requiring improvement based on previous student feedback. Observation of Upper and Lower Gastrointestinal (GI) malignancy multi-disciplinary meetings (MDMs) via Microsoft Teams was also introduced as a new teaching initiative. Method Four post-foundation training education fellows were allocated on alternating weeks to supervise third-year medical students on upper and lower GI ward rounds and during GI MDM observation, conduct bedside teaching and facilitate blended-learning clinical tutorials in accordance with the 2020 GMC Medical Licensing Assessment curriculum. A mixed-methods survey was sent to students after surgical placement and the results compared to student feedback from previous years. Results 31 out of 52 students (60%) on placement responded. 100% rated the fellow-led clinical tutorials as “excellent”. 87% of respondents rated the upper and lower GI ward rounds as either “excellent” (52%) or “good” (35%). All respondents rated the implementation of education fellows as either “very helpful” (94%) or “helpful” (6%) for their learning. Most students rated the MDM observation initiative as “good” (36%) or “average” (36%). Conclusions Implementation of education fellows on third-year medical student placements in General Surgery facilitates self-reported student learning and is associated with a drastically improved student learning experience. More work is required to develop GI MDM-based teaching to improve student learning experiences from MDMs.

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