强制性骨科手术轮转对医学生领域认知的影响。

IF 2.1 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS
William H Huffman, Radhika Gupta, Amanda M Moser, Kathleen Collins, Mitchell Hallman, David Casper, Cara A Cipriano
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引用次数: 0

摘要

介绍:暴露于骨科已被证明积极影响医学生对该领域的看法;然而,只有不到一半的医学院要求甚至提供骨科轮转作为核心临床课程的一部分。我们假设,在见习年度强制轮岗将抵消对该领域的刻板印象。因此,我们试图描述在我们的机构进行这样的临床轮转之前和之后对骨科手术的看法。方法:在2年的时间里,我们对所有320名医学生进行了一项匿名调查,这些学生完成了为期一周的强制性骨科手术轮转。我们收到了267份轮换前和153份轮换后的调查回复。学生们被问及他们的性别、年龄、种族/民族,以及“三个词来描述你对骨科手术的看法”。研究小组将这些词汇按主题和正面/负面含义分类,并评估其与医学生人口统计学的关联。结果:“bones”(占10.1%)、“intensity”(占6.5%)和“bros”(占6.4%)是最常见的修饰词。轮换后最常见的单词是“骨头”(6.2%的单词),“有趣”(5.9%的单词)和“激烈”(2.9%的单词)。消极词和中性词的比例在轮换后下降(消极词从27.5%下降到14.1%,P < 0.001;中性词从50.2%下降到38.3%,P < 0.001),而积极词的比例上升(21.3%上升到47.4%,P < 0.001)。男性(23.4%到54.7%,P < 0.001)和女性(20.9%到40.5%,P < 0.001)的积极词汇在轮换后都有所增加,而男性(20.1%到10.4%,P < 0.001)和女性(34.2%到17.6%,P < 0.001)的消极词汇在轮换后都有所减少。结论:本研究表明,最初对骨科手术的负面看法,特别是与男性主导的“兄弟”文化有关的负面看法,在临床轮转后显着改善。这表明强制性的骨科手术轮转可能会抵消对该领域的刻板印象,特别是在女学生中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effects of a Mandatory Orthopaedic Surgery Rotation on Medical Student Perceptions of the Field.

Introduction: Exposure to orthopaedics has been shown to positively influence medical student perceptions of the field; however, fewer than half of medical schools require or even offer an orthopaedic rotation as part of the core clinical curriculum. We hypothesized that a mandatory rotation during the clerkship year would counteract stereotypes about the field. Therefore, we sought to characterize the perceptions of orthopaedic surgery before and after such a clinical rotation at our institution.

Methods: Over a 2-year period, we administered an anonymous survey to all 320 medical students completing our mandatory 1-week orthopaedic surgery rotation. We received 267 prerotation and 153 postrotation survey responses. Students were asked for their sex, age, race/ethnicity, and "three words that describe your perception of orthopaedic surgery." These words were categorized according to theme and positive/negative connotation by the study team and evaluated for association with medical student demographics.

Results: The most frequent prerotation words were "bones" (10.1% of words), "intense" (6.5% of words), and "bros" (6.4% of words). The most frequent postrotation words were "bones" (6.2% of words), "fun" (5.9% of words), and "intense" (2.9% of words). The percentage of negative and neutral words decreased after the rotation (negative: 27.5% to 14.1%; P < 0.001; neutral: 50.2% to 38.3%; P < 0.001), whereas the percentage of positive words increased (21.3% to 47.4%; P < 0.001). Positive words increased postrotation for both men (23.4% to 54.7%; P < 0.001) and women (20.9% to 40.5%; P < 0.001), whereas negative words decreased for both men (20.1% to 10.4%; P < 0.001) and women (34.2% to 17.6%; P < 0.001).

Conclusion: This study demonstrates that initially negative perceptions of orthopaedic surgery, particularly those related to its reputation as a male-dominated "bro" culture, markedly improved following a clinical rotation. This suggests that a mandatory orthopaedic surgery rotation may counteract stereotypes about the field, particularly among women students.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
282
审稿时长
8 weeks
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