Abstract

BackgroundResidency programs have the intricate and complex role of training health care providers. But little is known about what residents and attendings consider norms of practice or the tensions among different values residents are expected to uphold. Thus, dialogical and reflective frameworks are being explored for resident learning.MethodsThis study examined the use of facilitated conversations with groups of residents and attending physicians while reviewing video-recorded resident–patient interactions. The conversations were recorded, transcribed, and qualitatively analyzed.ResultsA total of 24 residents and 10 attendings participated in conversations while separately and in parallel groups reviewing 15 resident sessions. Residents explicated the norms of practice and evaluated their performance, which often agreed with those of attending physicians in calling out important learning opportunities. When disagreement occurred, residents’ explications of their reasoning were often relevant and, via reflection and dialogue, helped clarify intentions that were not apparent in the videos. Residents and attendings often judged actions on more than one domain of value. For instance, if a resident addressed problems, built relationships in a timely manner, and acted autonomously without jeopardizing the quality of care, she satisfactorily performed her duty.ConclusionsPractice norms and value struggles were addressed by participants during reviews, which provided a promising framework for learning and assessment. Also, the non-hierarchical structure opened space to acknowledge a diversity of positions and for tensions among values to be explicated.

Highlights

  • Residency programs have the intricate and complex role of training health care providers

  • The complex role of training doctors is ascribed to residency programs, which must support resident learning while still providing safe patient care

  • Setting This study was conducted at a university-based family medicine residency program where residents and attending physicians provide full-scope family medical services through an outpatient clinic located in the heart of a metropolitan area

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Summary

Introduction

Residency programs have the intricate and complex role of training health care providers. The complex role of training doctors is ascribed to residency programs, which must support resident learning while still providing safe patient care. An increasing body of evidence supports the premise that resident engagement in reflection and self-assessment improves learning [7,8,9,10,11]. Learning has historically been viewed as adaptation, where the learner performs a behavior, an evaluator gives feedback, and the learner performs again [7, 8, 18]. In this style of assessment, an evaluator observes an object and judges its behavior. Variations exist around who is performing the evaluation (e.g., attending, peer, self) and who is giving the feedback (attending or peer) [7, 8, 19,20,21]

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