4.2 Article

I loved it, absolutely loved it a qualitative study exploring what student podiatrists learn volunteering as part of an interprofessional medical team at a marathon

Journal

JOURNAL OF FOOT AND ANKLE RESEARCH
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13047-023-00607-1

Keywords

Qualitative research; Volunteering; Interprofessional; Podiatry; Marathon

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This study explored the experiences of 25 podiatry graduates who volunteered at the Brighton and London Marathon race events. The findings showed that the students gained valuable academic and clinical skills and recognized the importance of teamwork, but also faced challenges from the environment. Therefore, preparing students for new clinical settings requires a balance to be struck.
Background Final year podiatry students volunteer annually as part of the wider interprofessional medical team at both the Brighton and London Marathon race events, supervised by qualified podiatrists, allied health professionals and physicians. Volunteering has been reported to be a positive experience for all participants and a way of developing a range of professional, transferable, and where appropriate, clinical skills. We sought to explore the lived experience of 25 students who volunteered at one of these events and aimed to: i) examine the experiential learning reported by students while volunteering in a dynamic and demanding clinical field environment; ii) determine whether there were elements of learning that could be translated to the traditional teaching environment in a preregistration podiatry course. Methods A qualitative design framework informed by the principles of interpretative phenomenological analysis, was adopted to explore this topic. We used IPA principles to enable analysis of four focus groups over a two-year period to generate findings. Focus group conversations were led by an external researcher, recorded, independently transcribed verbatim and anonymised prior to analysis by two different researchers. To enhance credibility, data analysis was followed by independent verification of themes, in addition to respondent validation. Results In total, five themes were identified: i) a new inter-professional working environment, ii) identification of unexpected psychosocial challenges, iii) the rigors of a non- clinical environment, iv) clinical skill development, and v) learning in an interprofessional team. Summary Throughout the focus group conversations, a range of positive and negative experiences were reported by the students. This volunteering opportunity fills a gap in learning as perceived by students, particularly around developing clinical skills and interprofessional working. However, the sometimes-frantic nature of a Marathon race event can both facilitate and impede learning. To maximize learning opportunities, particularly in the interprofessional environment, preparing students for new or different clinical settings remains a considerable challenge.

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