A Qualitative Exploratory Study: Using Medical Students' Experiences to Review the Role of a Rural Clinical Attachment in KwaZulu-Natal
S. Afr. fam. pract. (2004, Online)
; 55(3): 258-263, 2013.
Article
in En
| AIM
| ID: biblio-1270030
Responsible library:
CG1.1
ABSTRACT
Objectives:
There are challenges when it is considered that a main role of a rural clinical attachment for medical students is to encourage students to return after graduation to practise in rural areas. This view may lead to the relative neglect of other potential valuable roles with regard to rural exposure. This paper draws on the Force Field Model of teacher development to describe medical students' experiences; illustrate the complexity of interacting factors during rural exposure; caution that experiences cannot be predicted and highlight the positive incentives of a rural clinical attachment.Design:
The design was explorative; descriptive and qualitative.Setting:
The study setting was a district hospital in rural KwaZulu-Natal.Subjects:
The participants were four final-year medical students who had completed a compulsory attachment during their Family Medicine rotation.Results:
The participants felt that overall the experience was positive. The effect of biography and contextual forces were not as strong as expected. Institutional forces were important and programmatic forces tended to have a negative effect on experiences. The participants particularly enjoyed being acknowledged and felt empathy for the difficult tasks of doctors
Full text:
1
Index:
AIM
Main subject:
Students
/
Clinical Medicine
/
Rural Health
/
Qualitative Research
Type of study:
Prognostic_studies
/
Qualitative_research
Language:
En
Journal:
S. Afr. fam. pract. (2004, Online)
Year:
2013
Type:
Article