4.6 Article

Understanding Health Care Graduates' Conceptualizations of Transitions: A Longitudinal Qualitative Research Study

Journal

ACADEMIC MEDICINE
Volume 97, Issue 7, Pages 1049-1056

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004554

Keywords

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Funding

  1. 2019 Monash University Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Large Research Teaching and Learning Grant

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This study explores health care learners' conceptualizations of transitions from final year to new graduate. The findings reveal that there are 10 different conceptualizations categorized as time-bound and linear, ongoing and complex, or related to transition shock. The study emphasizes the importance of developing expanded and sophisticated understandings of transitions to better navigate graduate transitions in the health care field.
Purpose Although transitions have been defined in various ways in the higher education literature (e.g., inculcation, development, becoming), little research exists exploring health care learners' conceptualizations of transitions across their transition from final year to new graduate. How they understand transitions is important because such conceptualizations will shape how they navigate their transitions and vice versa. Method The authors conducted a 3-month longitudinal qualitative research study with 35 health care learners from 4 disciplines (medicine, dietetics, nursing, and pharmacy) across their final year to new graduate transition to explore how they conceptualized transitions. Data collection occurred between July 2019 and April 2020 at Monash University in Victoria, Australia. The authors employed framework analysis to interrogate the interview and longitudinal audio diary data cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Results The authors found 10 different conceptualizations of transitions broadly categorized as time bound and linear (one-off events, systems, linear, adaptation, linked to identities), ongoing and complex (ongoing processes, multifaceted, complex), or related to transition shock (labor, linked to emotions). The adaptation conceptualization increased in dominance over time, the linear conceptualization was more apparent in the interviews (time points 1 and 3), and the multifaceted and emotion-linked conceptualizations were more dominant in the longitudinal audio diaries (time point 2). Conclusions This novel study illustrates conceptualizations of transitions as broadly consistent with existing higher education literature but extends this research considerably by identifying differences in conceptualizations across time. The authors encourage health care learners, educators, and policy makers to develop expanded and more sophisticated understandings of transitions to ensure that health care learners can better navigate often challenging graduate transitions. Further research should explore stakeholders' transition conceptualizations over lengthier durations beyond the new graduate transition.

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