3.8 Article

Teaching medical students in general practice when conducting remote consults: a qualitative study

Journal

EDUCATION FOR PRIMARY CARE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/14739879.2023.2243597

Keywords

Remote consultation; teaching; education; medical; undergraduate; general practice

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The study explored the experience of New Zealand general practitioners conducting clinical teaching with medical students during telehealth consultations. Clinicians needed guidance in considering remote teaching with students, highlighting changes in teaching formats and the challenges and advantages compared to face-to-face interactions. Telehealth teaching offers new learning opportunities but also presents challenges, suggesting the need for guidelines to be developed and integrated into medical education programs.
BackgroundTelehealth involves real-time communication (telephone or video-call) between patients and health providers. The COVID-19 pandemic propelled general practitioners to conduct most consultations remotely, seeing patients face-to-face only when required. Placement opportunities and experience for medical students were reduced. Initially online learning programmes replaced clinical attachments. Subsequently, clinical teachers supervised students to engage in remote consultations, either in clinics or from their homes. This study aimed to explore the experience of New Zealand general practitioners undertaking clinical teaching with medical students when telehealth consulting.MethodsSemi-structured interviews with general practitioners who had taught medical students whilst consulting remotely. General inductive thematic analysis of transcribed interviews.ResultsSix female and four male participants aged 40 to over 65 years. Participants often focused on general practicalities of telehealth consultations and effects on the patient-doctor relationship, and needed direction to consider remote consultations with students, which added to the interactions. Four themes were identified: changes needed in teaching delivery format; direct comparison with face-to-face; challenges and advantages to remote teaching, each with subthemes.DiscussionClinicians needed to determine practical logistics and develop skills for both remote consulting and teaching. New format and structures of consultations needed planning. Differences from face-to-face teaching included scene-setting for the consultation and supervision factors. Telehealth teaching conferred new opportunities for learning but also challenges (e.g. consent, cues, uncertainty). Remote consultations are likely to remain a significant mode for doctor-patient interactions. Preliminary guidelines for teaching and learning using telehealth need to be developed and embedded into medical programmes and then evaluated.

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