Advanced Trainee-Led Physician Clinical Examination Workshop: Improving Training and Culture
Advanced Trainee-Led Physician Clinical Examination Workshop: Improving Training and Culture
Author Info
Prianka Puri Alice Kennard Luke Williamson Ashwin Swaminathan
Corresponding Author
Prianka PuriDepartment of Renal Medicine, The Canberra Hospital, Canberra, ACT, Australia
A B S T R A C T
Background: Near-to-peer teaching involves more experienced learners acting as tutors for junior colleagues and has significant theoretical benefits for both teachers and learners [1-3]. Aim: Development, implementation, and assessment of a weekend examination preparation workshop by Royal Australasian College of Physicians Advanced Trainees (ATs) for Basic Physician Trainees (BPTs), using a near-to-peer framework. Methods: A two-day offsite course was designed by ATs. Day 1 - subspecialty short-case demonstrations, followed by small-group examination practice. Shared downtime was organized for the evening. Day 2 - two exemplar long-case presentations by ATs with consultant examiner feedback, followed by interactive small-group sessions focusing on presenting long-cases. Results: A post-course survey was completed by 72% of BPTs (13/18) and 88% of ATs (8/9). Responses demonstrated that all BPTs would recommend this workshop to peers. 84% (11/13) found the course material very useful. 62% (5/8) ATs felt their leadership and teaching skills had significantly improved. BPTs reported that the AT long-case demonstrations were highly useful. Negative feedback included the venue, course timing, and lack of patients with clinical signs. Conclusion: This innovative AT-led examination preparation workshop significantly enhanced training culture and candidate well-being. ATs benefited with increased confidence in their ability to lead and teach.
Article Info
Article Type
Research ArticlePublication history
Received: Sat 13, Mar 2021Accepted: Wed 07, Apr 2021
Published: Tue 08, Jun 2021
Copyright
© 2023 Prianka Puri. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Hosting by Science Repository.DOI: 10.31487/j.JCMCR.2021.01.01