改进的处理工作流程和学生虐待报告的学生透明度导致毕业问卷数据的增加。

MedEdPublish (2016) Pub Date : 2024-09-17 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.12688/mep.20444.2
Adam Channell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对学生的虐待在历史上是美国医学院常见的记录,但来自美国医学院协会(AAMC)的毕业生问卷调查(GQ)数据显示,有大量学生经历过虐待,但没有报告这一事件。关于为什么学生不报告他们的经历,文献中有很多原因,包括害怕学术反响或对什么是虐待的误解。我们的机构通过GQ的数据发现,在理解与虐待相关的政策和程序知识方面存在缺陷,学生焦点小组的回应显示,许多学生对他们的报告是否会得到机构的跟进没有信心。这些因素促使我们成立了一个特别工作组,一旦收到有关虐待的报告,就对我们学校的工作流程进行调查,并研究如何提高学生群体的透明度,并根据他们的报告采取行动。我们采取措施,在虐待报告工作流程中更加重视与学生的沟通,并在每周的学生沟通邮件中公布已处理和解决的报告的匿名数据。经过一年的努力,我们的GQ百分位数数据从学生对虐待政策的认识的第10到25个百分位数跃升至第90个百分位数,从学生对虐待程序的了解的第25到50个百分位数跃升至第75到90个百分位数。GQ数据的这些跃升为政策变化提供了洞察力,这可能有利于其他正在努力建立安全环境的机构,让学生自信地报告虐待事件,并知道他们的担忧是重要的,并采取了行动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Improved processing workflow and student transparency with student mistreatment reports leads to graduation questionnaire data gains.

Improved processing workflow and student transparency with student mistreatment reports leads to graduation questionnaire data gains.

Improved processing workflow and student transparency with student mistreatment reports leads to graduation questionnaire data gains.

Mistreatment of students has been historically documented as common in U.S. medical schools, but graduate questionnaire (GQ) data from the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) displays high numbers of students who have experienced mistreatment but not reported the incident. There are many reasons within the literature as to why students do not report their experiences, including fear of academic repercussion or a misunderstanding of what constitutes as mistreatment. Our institution found through GQ data that there was a shortcoming in understanding policies and knowledge of procedures associated with mistreatment, and student focus group responses showed that many students were not confident that their reports would receive follow-up on the part of the institution. These factors led to the formation of a task force to investigate our school's workflow once a report of concern for mistreatment is received and examine measures to increase transparency to the student body that their reports are acted upon. We took measures to place a greater emphasis on communication with students during the mistreatment report workflow, as well as releasing name-blinded data within our weekly student communication emails regarding reports that had been processed and resolved. The results after one year of these efforts saw our GQ percentile data jump from falling between the 10 th to 25 th percentile to the 90 th percentile for student awareness of mistreatment policies and from between the 25 th to 50 th percentile to between the 75 th to 90 th percentile for student knowledge of mistreatment procedures. These jumps in GQ figures provide insight for policy changes that could benefit other institutions struggling with building a safe environment for students to confidently report incidents of mistreatment with knowledge that their concerns are important and acted upon.

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