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1.
Clin Teach ; 21(1): e13639, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37641477

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Teaching hospitals are fast-paced health care environments where clinical supervisors constantly balance teaching and patient care. Although hospital-based clinicians in acute care settings regularly teach trainees, views regarding their teaching roles and how this relates to professional satisfaction are less well studied. We explored perspectives of physicians who teach trainees in medical intensive care units (MICUs), to understand whether their engagement in teaching has any impact on professional (job) satisfaction. METHODS: This qualitative study used focus groups of MICU fellows (postgraduate clinical trainees) and attending physicians (consultants) to explore participants' perceptions of their teaching roles. Focus groups were audiotaped and transcribed; thematic analysis was conducted on de-identified transcripts. FINDINGS: Four focus groups were held; two with MICU attendings (n = 13) and two with MICU fellows (n = 12). We identified four key themes: two challenges of teaching (being a chameleon; calibrating learner abilities), one benefit of teaching (facilitating learners' eureka moments) and a call for professional development (peer coaching to enhance teaching skills). DISCUSSION: Although teaching in acute clinical environments requires balancing dynamic learner needs and complex patient care needs, participants found it highly rewarding. They called for peer coaching initiatives to enhance professional development as teachers and demonstrate departmental commitment to teaching. CONCLUSION: While teaching in acute clinical settings is challenging for many reasons, clinical teachers emphasise that it is very satisfying when learners see the 'light'. Overt institutional support and recognition for clinical teachers along with peer coaching and debriefing may tilt the balance towards the rewards side of the equation and foster professional satisfaction.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Physicians , Humans , Health Personnel , Focus Groups , Intensive Care Units , Teaching
4.
Med Teach ; 43(12): 1450-1452, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33290669

ABSTRACT

Teaching in a learner-centred clinical setting requires clinical teachers trained in diagnosing and addressing learner needs and interests in order to create an optimal learning environment. These educational skills may not have been explicitly addressed in medical training in the past, when little to no focus was devoted to the learning environment and promoting learner-centredness. Thus, clinical teachers may be left without a model for their important and nuanced role as facilitators of learning in the current environment. We propose that clinical teachers frame their educational approach through the lens of teachers' perspectives. Not only does this model illustrate the factors that influence and modify clinical teachers' mindset, but it also demonstrates the impact that teachers' experiences may have upon creating the learning environment and determining educational outcomes. This model also identifies a feasible starting point for essential staff development: refining communication skills for use in the educational setting. With this training and model to frame understanding, clinical teachers may be better prepared to fulfill their essential role in the learner-centred educational clinical environment.


Subject(s)
Learning , Teaching , Humans , Surveys and Questionnaires
6.
ATS Sch ; 1(3): 316-330, 2020 Jul 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33870298

ABSTRACT

Background: Interpersonal and communication skills are essential for physicians practicing in critical care settings. Accordingly, demonstration of these skills has been a core competency of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education since 2014. However, current practices regarding communication skills training in adult and pediatric critical care fellowships are not well described. Objective: To describe the current state of communication curricula and training methods in adult and pediatric critical care training programs as demonstrated by the published literature. Methods: We performed a systematic review of the published literature using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses checklist. Three authors reviewed a comprehensive set of databases and independently selected articles on the basis of a predefined set of inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data were independently extracted from the selected articles. Results: The 23 publications meeting inclusion criteria fell into the following study classifications: intervention (n = 15), cross-sectional survey (n = 5), and instrument validation (n = 3). Most interventional studies assessed short-term and self-reported outcomes (e.g., learner attitudes and perspectives) only. Fifteen of 22 publications represented pediatric subspecialty programs. Conclusion: Opportunities exist to evaluate the influence of communication training programs on important outcomes, including measured learner behavior and patient and family outcomes, and the durability of skill retention.

10.
J Ultrasound Med ; 33(3): 511-9, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24567463

ABSTRACT

Three-dimensional sonography is useful in the preoperative evaluation of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. In this pictorial essay, we review the characteristic spectrum of grayscale and Doppler appearances of parathyroid glands on 2-dimensional sonography and demonstrate the additional benefits of 3-dimensional scanning.


Subject(s)
Hyperparathyroidism, Primary/diagnostic imaging , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Ultrasonography/methods , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Image Enhancement/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Reproducibility of Results , Retrospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity
11.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 5: 109, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22016728

ABSTRACT

Little about the neuropsychology of art perception and evaluation is known. Most neuropsychological approaches to art have focused on art production and have been anecdotal and qualitative. The field is in desperate need of quantitative methods if it is to advance. Here, we combine a quantitative approach to the assessment of art with modern voxel-lesion-symptom-mapping methods to determine brain-behavior relationships in art perception. We hypothesized that perception of different attributes of art are likely to be disrupted by damage to different regions of the brain. Twenty participants with right hemisphere damage were given the Assessment of Art Attributes, which is designed to quantify judgments of descriptive attributes of visual art. Each participant rated 24 paintings on 6 conceptual attributes (depictive accuracy, abstractness, emotion, symbolism, realism, and animacy) and 6 perceptual attributes (depth, color temperature, color saturation, balance, stroke, and simplicity) and their interest in and preference for these paintings. Deviation scores were obtained for each brain-damaged participant for each attribute based on correlations with group average ratings from 30 age-matched healthy participants. Right hemisphere damage affected participants' judgments of abstractness, accuracy, and stroke quality. Damage to areas within different parts of the frontal parietal and lateral temporal cortices produced deviation in judgments in four of six conceptual attributes (abstractness, symbolism, realism, and animacy). Of the formal attributes, only depth was affected by inferior prefrontal damage. No areas of brain damage were associated with deviations in interestingness or preference judgments. The perception of conceptual and formal attributes in artwork may in part dissociate from each other and from evaluative judgments. More generally, this approach demonstrates the feasibility of quantitative approaches to the neuropsychology of art.

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