4.5 Article

Navigating the uncertainty of health advocacy teaching and evaluation from the trainee's perspective

Journal

MEDICAL TEACHER
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 79-86

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0142159X.2021.1967905

Keywords

Health advocate; advocacy; competency-based medical education; managing uncertainty in medical education; communicator

Funding

  1. Medical Education Research/Innovation Project Fund, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa

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The training of health advocacy skills in postgraduate medical education appears to be inadequate, with trainees feeling that the role of advocates is undervalued and disconnected from clinical learning. The lack of emphasis on advocacy may lead to the perception that it is not valuable, impeding trainees from developing advocacy skills.
Background There may be no competency more shrouded in uncertainty than health advocacy (HA), raising questions about the robustness of advocacy training in postgraduate medical education. By understanding how programs currently train HA, we can identify whether trainees' learning needs are being met. Methods From 2017 to 2019, we reviewed curricular documents across nine direct-entry specialties at all Ontario medical schools, comparing content for the HA and communicator roles to delineate role-specific challenges. We then conducted semi-structured interviews with trainees (n = 9) and faculty (n = 6) to review findings and discuss their impact. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Results Curricular documents revealed vague objectives and ill-defined modes of assessment for both intrinsic roles. This uncertainty was perceived as more problematic for HA, in part because HA seemed both undervalued in, and disconnected from, clinical learning. Trainees felt that the onus was on them to figure out how to develop and demonstrate HA competence, causing many to turn their learning attention elsewhere. Discussion Lack of curricular focus seems to create the perception that advocacy isn't valuable, deterring trainees-even those keen to become competent advocates-from developing HA skills. Such ambivalence may have troubling downstream effects for both patient care and trainees' professional development.

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