专业精神、领导力和应变能力是否共同作用于专业身份的形成?确证因子分析提供的证据

Á. Ryan, C. N. Moran, David Byrne, Anne Hickey, Fiona Boland, Denis W Harkin, S. S. Guraya, Abdelsalam Bensaaud, Frank Doyle
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摘要

职业身份形成(PIF)是一个持续的、自我反思的过程,涉及到像医生一样思考、感受和行动的习惯,是医学教育不可或缺的组成部分。定性研究表明,职业认同感的形成与职业精神、应变能力和领导力有关,但这方面的定量研究却十分匮乏。我们分析了 PILLAR 研究的数据,该研究是对都柏林 RCSI 医学与健康科学大学临床前医学生群体进行的在线横截面评估,采用了各相关领域成熟且经过验证的定量测量方法:PIF、职业素养、领导力和应变能力。该研究共使用了 76 个项目,结合了四个经过验证的量表以及一些人口统计学问题。通过对提出的三因素高阶模型进行确认性因素分析,研究了 PIF 受专业精神、复原力和领导力影响并与之相关的假设。模型估计采用了最大似然法(MLM)和地名旋转法。对 1311 名学生进行的潜变量分析表明,三因素高阶模型最符合数据;表明 PIF 受专业精神、复原力和领导力的影响,而且这些结构在统计上是不同的,并解释了 PIF 的不同方面。这种 PIF 的高阶模型优于饱和模型和三因素模型。我们的研究以现有概念为基础,首次定量支持了专业精神、应变能力和领导力对专业认同发展的贡献,并界定了 PIF 与这些建构之间的相互关系。医学教育工作者在设计旨在提高 PIF 的课程和教育策略时,可以利用这些信息。未来的工作应寻求纵向评估这些构建因素的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do professionalism, leadership, and resilience combine for professional identity formation? Evidence from confirmatory factor analysis
Professional identity formation (PIF) is an ongoing, self-reflective process involving habits of thinking, feeling and acting like a physician and is an integral component of medical education. While qualitative work has suggested that PIF is informed by professionalism, resilience, and leadership, there is a dearth of quantitative work in this area. Multiple methods build rigor and the present study aimed to quantitatively assess the relative psychometric contributions of professionalism, resilience, and leadership constructs to informing PIF, using a latent factor analysis approach.We analyzed data from the PILLAR study, which is an online cross-sectional assessment of a pre-clinical cohort of medical students in the RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin, using established and validated quantitative measures in each area of interest: PIF, professionalism, leadership and resilience. A total of 76 items, combining four validated scales, along with a selection of demographic questions, were used. The hypothesis that PIF is informed by, and correlates with, professionalism, resilience and leadership was examined by conducting a confirmatory factor analysis of a proposed three-factor higher-order model. Model estimation used Maximum Likelihood Method (MLM) with geomin rotation. The hypothesized (measurement) model was examined against an alternative (saturated) model, as well as a three-factor model.Latent variable analysis from 1,311 students demonstrated that a three-factor higher-order model best fit the data; suggesting PIF is informed by professionalism, resilience, and leadership, and that these constructs are statistically distinct and account for differential aspects of PIF. This higher-order model of PIF outperformed both the saturated model and the three-factor model. The analysis of which component may be the most or least influential was inconclusive, and the overall model was not influenced by year of training.Building upon existing conceptual contentions, our study is the first to quantitatively support the contribution of professionalism, resilience, and leadership to the development of professional identity, and to delineate the inter-relationships between PIF and these constructs. This information can be used by medical educators when designing curricula and educational strategies intended to enhance PIF. Future work should seek to assess the influence of these constructs longitudinally.
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