4.6 Article

A survey of resident physicians' perceptions of competency-based education in standardized resident training in China: a preliminary study

Journal

BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-022-03863-0

Keywords

Competency-based medical education; Resident physicians; Standardized resident training

Funding

  1. Chongqing Research Program of Basic Research and Frontier Technology [cstc2018jcyjAX0775]
  2. ChongQing University graduate education and teaching reform project [cquyjg21303]
  3. clinical project of Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine [XB2021087]
  4. Fujian Research and Training Grants for Young and Middle-aged Leaders in Healthcare
  5. National Natural Science Found of Fujian Province [2022J011369]

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This study investigated the perceptions of Chinese resident physicians towards competency-based medical education (CBME) and found that they generally held positive attitudes towards incorporating CBME into standardized resident training (SRT). The study revealed that residents placed the highest importance on clinical skills and patient care, interpersonal communication, and professionalism, and were interested in CBME residency programs. Most residents believed that implementing CBME could help clarify their professional direction and improve career planning.
Background Understanding resident physicians' perceptions of competency-based medical education(CBME) may help improve approaches for implementing such education in standardized resident training (SRT). We conducted surveys of residents in China to identify their perceptions of CBME and determine the degree to which such education impacts their career plans. Methods Questionnaire contained a total of 24 questions, which were answered using multiple choice or yes/no, was distributed to residents who were undergoing SRT, regardless of specialty, at 7 accredited training bases located across six provinces of China. The survey aimed to investigate residents' reasons for participating in SRT, perceptions of CBME, interest in receiving CBME-associated courses, and attitudes towards CBME. Results Overall, 441 residents completed the questionnaire.17.7% (78/441) responded no clear objective before the participated in SRT. Only 3.9% (17/441) fully understood the objectives, training contents, and assessment system of the current competency-based standardized training program for residents in China. Residents ranked clinical skills and patient care, interpersonal communication, and professionalism, as the three most important competencies. Most were interested in the CBME residency programs. 90.7% felt that implementing CBME could help them clarify their professional direction and improve their career planning. Conclusion Residents had positive perceptions of the incorporation of CBME into SRT. Administrators, educational leaders, and clinical faculty should seek to further publicize and increase the popularity of CBME.

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