Financial implications of unpaid clinical placements for allied health, dentistry, medical, and nursing students in Australia: a scoping review with recommendations for policy, research, and practice.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Hannah Beks, Sandra Walsh, Suzanne Clayden, Lucinda Watson, Joyti Zwar, Laura Alston
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Investing in allied health, dentistry, medical, and nursing undergraduate and postgraduate qualifying education is critical to meet a growing demand on global health care systems. Clinical placements are an integral component of qualifying training and are conventionally unpaid. Widespread economic challenges, attributed to a post-COVID-19 pandemic recovery era and global unrest, have led to growing economic hardship for populations, even in high-income countries like Australia. Allied health, dentistry, medical, and nursing undergraduate and postgraduate students undertaking unpaid clinical placements are not immune from these stressors, which has implications for education providers, ageing populations, the future health care system, and policy-makers. The purpose of this review was to better understand these stressors by scoping the financial implications of unpaid clinical placements for allied health, dentistry, medical, and nursing students in Australian research.

Methods: The Joanna Briggs Institute's scoping review methodology was used. This involved a search of academic databases and an extensive search of grey literature sources. Literature published from 1 January 2014 was included. Citations were independently screened by two reviewers.

Results: Thirty-three research studies were included. Most studies focused on allied health students (n = 12), followed by nursing (n = 11), and medical students (n = 5), with an additional five studies focused on multiple disciplines, including dentistry. One study had an interventional component. Findings were grouped around four concepts: reliance on self-reported measures of financial implications, costs of unpaid clinical placements for students, implications of costs for students, and an urgent need for targeted strategies to redress.

Conclusions: The financial implications of unpaid clinical placements for allied health, dentistry, medical, and nursing students in Australia are well-established in research. Impacts are significant for the future of Australia's health workforce and health system. Research findings have been consistent over the past decade in advocating for greater financial support for students undertaking unpaid clinical placements and flexibility of placement models to mitigate the indirect costs of placements. Collaboration between state and federal government, universities, peak professional bodies, and placement host organisations is imperative to implement a suite of strategies to redress the financial burden experienced by students and secure the future of Australia's health workforce.

澳大利亚专职医疗、牙科、医学和护理专业学生无偿临床实习的财务影响:政策、研究和实践建议的范围界定审查。
背景:投资于专职医疗、牙科、医疗和护理本科及研究生资格教育对于满足全球医疗保健系统日益增长的需求至关重要。临床实习是资格培训不可或缺的组成部分,传统上是无偿的。后 19 世纪大流行病恢复时期和全球动荡造成的广泛经济挑战,导致民众经济日益困难,即使在澳大利亚这样的高收入国家也是如此。从事无薪临床实习的专职医疗、牙科、医学和护理专业的本科生和研究生也难逃这些压力,这对教育提供者、老龄化人口、未来的医疗保健系统和政策制定者都有影响。本综述旨在通过对澳大利亚研究中联合健康、牙科、医学和护理专业学生无薪临床实习的财务影响进行调查,更好地了解这些压力因素:采用乔安娜-布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)的范围界定综述方法。方法:采用了乔安娜-布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)的范围综述方法,其中包括对学术数据库的检索和对灰色文献来源的广泛检索。从 2014 年 1 月 1 日起发表的文献均包括在内。引用文献由两名审稿人独立筛选:结果:共纳入 33 项研究。大多数研究侧重于专职医疗学生(12 项),其次是护理学生(11 项)和医科学生(5 项),另有 5 项研究侧重于多个学科,包括牙科。其中一项研究包含干预内容。研究结果围绕四个概念:依赖自我报告的财务影响措施、无偿临床实习对学生的成本、成本对学生的影响以及迫切需要有针对性的补救策略:无薪临床实习对澳大利亚专职医疗、牙科、医学和护理专业学生的财务影响已在研究中得到证实。这对澳大利亚未来的医疗卫生队伍和医疗卫生系统具有重大影响。在过去的十年中,研究结果一直主张为进行无薪临床实习的学生提供更多的经济支持,并灵活运用实习模式,以减轻实习的间接成本。州政府和联邦政府、大学、顶尖专业机构以及实习主办机构之间的合作势在必行,以实施一系列战略来减轻学生的经济负担,并确保澳大利亚未来医疗卫生人才队伍的发展。
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来源期刊
BMC Health Services Research
BMC Health Services Research 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
1372
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Health Services Research is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of health services research, including delivery of care, management of health services, assessment of healthcare needs, measurement of outcomes, allocation of healthcare resources, evaluation of different health markets and health services organizations, international comparative analysis of health systems, health economics and the impact of health policies and regulations.
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