Felix May, Stephanie Romiszewski, Ben Norris, Michelle A. Miller, A. Zeman
{"title":"医学生睡眠教育及其障碍:20年来有所改善吗?","authors":"Felix May, Stephanie Romiszewski, Ben Norris, Michelle A. Miller, A. Zeman","doi":"10.1136/JNNP-2019-BNPA.27","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Objectives/Aims There is growing recognition that sound sleep is a pillar of health, alongside adequate nutrition and exercise. Sleep problems are common and often treatable, improving lives. Twenty years ago, Stores1 revealed the paucity of UK medical school-education on sleep disorders, with a median teaching time of 20 min: we investigate here whether this situation has changed. Methods A cross-sectional survey of 34 medical degree courses in the UK, adapted from Stores’ 1998 questionnaire, including time spent on teaching sleep medicine, sub-topics covered, and forms of assessment. Responses were coded and analysed numerically where possible; free text was analysed thematically. We excluded responses not concerned with general undergraduate education. Results Twenty-five (74%) UK medical schools responded to our survey. The time devoted to teaching sleep medicine during undergraduate training was median 1.5 hours, mode- Only two schools reported a sleep medicine syllabus or dedicated compulsory module (8%), whilst two had optional student-selected sleep medicine modules (8%). Sleep medicine was generally described as being subsumed into other areas, primarily respiratory medicine, sometimes ENT, Psychiatry and Neurology; coverage of subtopics mirrored this pattern. Asked if enough time is allotted for teaching on sleep medicine, 50% said Yes, 38% No, 13% were unsure. Free-text comments made by our respondents had recurring themes: sleep medicine is typically subsumed into teaching by other specialties, consequently course directors are uncertain about the details of provision, obstructive sleep-apnoea is often identified as the key or only relevant sleep disorder, knowledge of sleep disorders is regarded as optional, and there is inertia about the prospect of change. However, a substantial minority of respondents are enthusiastic about making improvements to the sleep education they currently provide, and keen to use additional resources. Examples of good practice exist already, with one school offering an optional 30 hour sleep medicine module annually to 12 students. Conclusions Little has changed since Stores’ previous survey 20 years ago: sleep medicine remains a neglected topic despite agreement on the importance of sleep for general health. Sleep research is the exception rather than the rule. Obstacles to change are akin to those noted by Stores, including the views that ‘sleep is not a core topic’, or the ‘curriculum is too crowded’. However, there is some enthusiasm for improving sleep education. Given its broad importance to health, and the existence of effective therapies, we recommend that medical schools should implement a sleep medicine curriculum. Reference Stores, G. & Crawford, C. Medical student education in sleep and its disorders. J. R. Coll. Physicians Lond. 1998;32:149–153. Declaration of interests Funded by the Royal Devon and Exeter Trust Research Grants Scheme. No competing interests.","PeriodicalId":438758,"journal":{"name":"Members’ POSTER Abstracts","volume":"27 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"27 Medical student education in sleep and its disorders: has it improved over 20 years?\",\"authors\":\"Felix May, Stephanie Romiszewski, Ben Norris, Michelle A. Miller, A. Zeman\",\"doi\":\"10.1136/JNNP-2019-BNPA.27\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Objectives/Aims There is growing recognition that sound sleep is a pillar of health, alongside adequate nutrition and exercise. Sleep problems are common and often treatable, improving lives. Twenty years ago, Stores1 revealed the paucity of UK medical school-education on sleep disorders, with a median teaching time of 20 min: we investigate here whether this situation has changed. Methods A cross-sectional survey of 34 medical degree courses in the UK, adapted from Stores’ 1998 questionnaire, including time spent on teaching sleep medicine, sub-topics covered, and forms of assessment. Responses were coded and analysed numerically where possible; free text was analysed thematically. We excluded responses not concerned with general undergraduate education. Results Twenty-five (74%) UK medical schools responded to our survey. The time devoted to teaching sleep medicine during undergraduate training was median 1.5 hours, mode- Only two schools reported a sleep medicine syllabus or dedicated compulsory module (8%), whilst two had optional student-selected sleep medicine modules (8%). Sleep medicine was generally described as being subsumed into other areas, primarily respiratory medicine, sometimes ENT, Psychiatry and Neurology; coverage of subtopics mirrored this pattern. Asked if enough time is allotted for teaching on sleep medicine, 50% said Yes, 38% No, 13% were unsure. Free-text comments made by our respondents had recurring themes: sleep medicine is typically subsumed into teaching by other specialties, consequently course directors are uncertain about the details of provision, obstructive sleep-apnoea is often identified as the key or only relevant sleep disorder, knowledge of sleep disorders is regarded as optional, and there is inertia about the prospect of change. However, a substantial minority of respondents are enthusiastic about making improvements to the sleep education they currently provide, and keen to use additional resources. Examples of good practice exist already, with one school offering an optional 30 hour sleep medicine module annually to 12 students. Conclusions Little has changed since Stores’ previous survey 20 years ago: sleep medicine remains a neglected topic despite agreement on the importance of sleep for general health. Sleep research is the exception rather than the rule. Obstacles to change are akin to those noted by Stores, including the views that ‘sleep is not a core topic’, or the ‘curriculum is too crowded’. However, there is some enthusiasm for improving sleep education. Given its broad importance to health, and the existence of effective therapies, we recommend that medical schools should implement a sleep medicine curriculum. Reference Stores, G. & Crawford, C. Medical student education in sleep and its disorders. J. R. Coll. Physicians Lond. 1998;32:149–153. Declaration of interests Funded by the Royal Devon and Exeter Trust Research Grants Scheme. No competing interests.\",\"PeriodicalId\":438758,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Members’ POSTER Abstracts\",\"volume\":\"27 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2019-05-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Members’ POSTER Abstracts\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1136/JNNP-2019-BNPA.27\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Members’ POSTER Abstracts","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1136/JNNP-2019-BNPA.27","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
目标/目的人们日益认识到,良好的睡眠与充足的营养和锻炼一样,是健康的支柱。睡眠问题很常见,而且通常是可以治疗的,可以改善生活。20年前,Stores1揭示了英国医学院在睡眠障碍方面的教育不足,平均教学时间为20分钟:我们在这里调查这种情况是否已经改变。方法对英国34个医学学位课程的横断面调查,改编自Stores 1998年的问卷,包括教授睡眠医学的时间、涵盖的子主题和评估形式。在可能的情况下,对答复进行编码和数字分析;对自由文本进行了主题分析。我们排除了与普通本科教育无关的回答。25所(74%)英国医学院回应了我们的调查。本科阶段睡眠医学教学时间平均为1.5小时,只有两所学校(8%)报告了睡眠医学教学大纲或专门的必修模块,而两所学校(8%)有学生自选的睡眠医学模块。睡眠医学通常被归入其他领域,主要是呼吸医学,有时是耳鼻喉科,精神病学和神经病学;子主题的覆盖反映了这种模式。当被问及是否有足够的时间用于睡眠医学教学时,50%的人说有,38%的人说没有,13%的人不确定。我们的受访者的自由文本评论有反复出现的主题:睡眠医学通常被纳入其他专业的教学,因此课程主任对提供的细节不确定,阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停通常被确定为关键或唯一相关的睡眠障碍,睡眠障碍的知识被认为是可选的,并且对改变的前景存在惯性。然而,相当一部分受访者热衷于改进他们目前提供的睡眠教育,并热衷于使用额外的资源。良好实践的例子已经存在,一所学校每年为12名学生提供30小时的可选睡眠医学模块。自20年前Stores的上一次调查以来,情况几乎没有改变:尽管人们一致认为睡眠对整体健康很重要,但睡眠药物仍然是一个被忽视的话题。睡眠研究是例外,而不是规律。改变的障碍与Stores指出的类似,包括“睡眠不是核心话题”或“课程太拥挤”的观点。然而,人们对改善睡眠教育抱有一些热情。鉴于睡眠对健康的广泛重要性,以及有效疗法的存在,我们建议医学院开设睡眠医学课程。参考Stores, G. & Crawford, C.医学生睡眠教育及其障碍。j·r·科尔。中华医学杂志。1998;32:149-153。由皇家德文郡和埃克塞特信托研究资助计划资助的利益声明。没有竞争利益。
27 Medical student education in sleep and its disorders: has it improved over 20 years?
Objectives/Aims There is growing recognition that sound sleep is a pillar of health, alongside adequate nutrition and exercise. Sleep problems are common and often treatable, improving lives. Twenty years ago, Stores1 revealed the paucity of UK medical school-education on sleep disorders, with a median teaching time of 20 min: we investigate here whether this situation has changed. Methods A cross-sectional survey of 34 medical degree courses in the UK, adapted from Stores’ 1998 questionnaire, including time spent on teaching sleep medicine, sub-topics covered, and forms of assessment. Responses were coded and analysed numerically where possible; free text was analysed thematically. We excluded responses not concerned with general undergraduate education. Results Twenty-five (74%) UK medical schools responded to our survey. The time devoted to teaching sleep medicine during undergraduate training was median 1.5 hours, mode- Only two schools reported a sleep medicine syllabus or dedicated compulsory module (8%), whilst two had optional student-selected sleep medicine modules (8%). Sleep medicine was generally described as being subsumed into other areas, primarily respiratory medicine, sometimes ENT, Psychiatry and Neurology; coverage of subtopics mirrored this pattern. Asked if enough time is allotted for teaching on sleep medicine, 50% said Yes, 38% No, 13% were unsure. Free-text comments made by our respondents had recurring themes: sleep medicine is typically subsumed into teaching by other specialties, consequently course directors are uncertain about the details of provision, obstructive sleep-apnoea is often identified as the key or only relevant sleep disorder, knowledge of sleep disorders is regarded as optional, and there is inertia about the prospect of change. However, a substantial minority of respondents are enthusiastic about making improvements to the sleep education they currently provide, and keen to use additional resources. Examples of good practice exist already, with one school offering an optional 30 hour sleep medicine module annually to 12 students. Conclusions Little has changed since Stores’ previous survey 20 years ago: sleep medicine remains a neglected topic despite agreement on the importance of sleep for general health. Sleep research is the exception rather than the rule. Obstacles to change are akin to those noted by Stores, including the views that ‘sleep is not a core topic’, or the ‘curriculum is too crowded’. However, there is some enthusiasm for improving sleep education. Given its broad importance to health, and the existence of effective therapies, we recommend that medical schools should implement a sleep medicine curriculum. Reference Stores, G. & Crawford, C. Medical student education in sleep and its disorders. J. R. Coll. Physicians Lond. 1998;32:149–153. Declaration of interests Funded by the Royal Devon and Exeter Trust Research Grants Scheme. No competing interests.