{"title":"提高家庭医学住院医师反思深度:一项干预结果","authors":"","doi":"10.37184/lnjpc.2707-3521.3.9","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The ability to reflect in professional practice is the cornerstone of self-directed learning. Reflective practice in medicine is an important teaching-learning modality for improving decision-making and clinical reasoning. It is a strategy for self-regulation of clinical and academic performance. This study was undertaken with the aim of improving the reflective ability skills of family medicine residents through the introduction of reflective practice at Aga Khan University. This was a case study using a pre-post design. A questionnaire was administered to assess the baseline level of reflection in family medicine residents, followed by a workshop on reflective practice to orient residents about the process and levels of reflection. Residents were asked to document reflective logs on a blog, feedback was provided. Post-intervention data were collected by re-administration of the questionnaire the change in the reflective level. Pre-post questionnaire data were analysed for comparisons using the Wilcoxin Sign Rank test on SPSS version 19. Out of 15 eligible residents, a total of 13 residents were available during the study period. In a pre-intervention questionnaire, reflective levels across the domains indicated that residents used reflection 50% of the time which increased post-intervention to more than 80% of the time. The degree of pre-post difference was lowest in the ‘Habitual Action Domain’ and largest in the domains of ‘Reflection’ and ‘Critical Reflection’ (4.1-4.8 and 3.8-4.5). Reflective practice is an effective strategy to develop residents as reflective thinkers by increasing their depth of reflection. 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This study was undertaken with the aim of improving the reflective ability skills of family medicine residents through the introduction of reflective practice at Aga Khan University. This was a case study using a pre-post design. A questionnaire was administered to assess the baseline level of reflection in family medicine residents, followed by a workshop on reflective practice to orient residents about the process and levels of reflection. Residents were asked to document reflective logs on a blog, feedback was provided. Post-intervention data were collected by re-administration of the questionnaire the change in the reflective level. Pre-post questionnaire data were analysed for comparisons using the Wilcoxin Sign Rank test on SPSS version 19. Out of 15 eligible residents, a total of 13 residents were available during the study period. In a pre-intervention questionnaire, reflective levels across the domains indicated that residents used reflection 50% of the time which increased post-intervention to more than 80% of the time. The degree of pre-post difference was lowest in the ‘Habitual Action Domain’ and largest in the domains of ‘Reflection’ and ‘Critical Reflection’ (4.1-4.8 and 3.8-4.5). Reflective practice is an effective strategy to develop residents as reflective thinkers by increasing their depth of reflection. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在专业实践中反思的能力是自主学习的基石。医学反思实践是提高决策能力和临床推理能力的重要教学方式。这是一种自我调节临床和学业表现的策略。本研究的目的是通过在阿迦汗大学引入反思实践来提高家庭医学住院医师的反思能力。这是一个使用前后设计的案例研究。通过问卷调查评估家庭医学住院医师反思的基线水平,随后举办反思实践研讨会,指导住院医师了解反思的过程和水平。居民被要求在博客上记录反思日志,并提供反馈。干预后通过重新管理问卷收集数据,观察反思水平的变化。问卷前后数据采用SPSS version 19上的Wilcoxin Sign Rank检验进行分析比较。在15名符合条件的居民中,共有13名居民在研究期间可用。在干预前的问卷调查中,各领域的反思水平表明,居民使用反思的时间为50%,干预后增加到80%以上。“习惯行为领域”的前后差异程度最低,“反思”和“批判性反思”领域的前后差异程度最大(4.1-4.8和3.8-4.5)。反思性实践是提高居民反思深度,培养居民成为反思性思考者的有效策略。通过反馈促进他们的反思,提高他们的反思能力。
Enhancing Depth of Reflection of Family Medicine Residents: Results of an Intervention
The ability to reflect in professional practice is the cornerstone of self-directed learning. Reflective practice in medicine is an important teaching-learning modality for improving decision-making and clinical reasoning. It is a strategy for self-regulation of clinical and academic performance. This study was undertaken with the aim of improving the reflective ability skills of family medicine residents through the introduction of reflective practice at Aga Khan University. This was a case study using a pre-post design. A questionnaire was administered to assess the baseline level of reflection in family medicine residents, followed by a workshop on reflective practice to orient residents about the process and levels of reflection. Residents were asked to document reflective logs on a blog, feedback was provided. Post-intervention data were collected by re-administration of the questionnaire the change in the reflective level. Pre-post questionnaire data were analysed for comparisons using the Wilcoxin Sign Rank test on SPSS version 19. Out of 15 eligible residents, a total of 13 residents were available during the study period. In a pre-intervention questionnaire, reflective levels across the domains indicated that residents used reflection 50% of the time which increased post-intervention to more than 80% of the time. The degree of pre-post difference was lowest in the ‘Habitual Action Domain’ and largest in the domains of ‘Reflection’ and ‘Critical Reflection’ (4.1-4.8 and 3.8-4.5). Reflective practice is an effective strategy to develop residents as reflective thinkers by increasing their depth of reflection. Facilitation of their reflection through feedback enhances their ability to reflect.