首页> 外文期刊>BMC Medical Ethics >Beyond ‘health and safety’ – the challenges facing students asked to work outside of their comfort, qualification level or expertise on medical elective placement
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Beyond ‘health and safety’ – the challenges facing students asked to work outside of their comfort, qualification level or expertise on medical elective placement

机译:除了“健康与安全”之外,学生面临的挑战是要求他们在舒适度,学历水平或医学选修专业知识之外工作

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On elective students may not always be clear about safeguarding themselves and others. It is important that placements are safe, and ethically grounded. A concern for medical schools is equipping their students for exposure to and response to uncomfortable and/or unfamiliar requests in locations away from home, where their comfort and safety, or that of the patient, may be compromised. This can require legal, ethical, and/or moral reasoning on the part of the student. The goal of this article is to establish what students actually encounter on elective, to inform better preparing students for safe and ethical medical placements. We discuss the implications of our findings, which are arguably applicable to other areas of graduate training, e.g. first medical roles post-qualification. An anonymised survey exploring clinical and ethical dilemmas on elective was issued across 3?years of returning final year elective medical students. Questions included the prevalence and type of potentially unsafe scenarios encountered, barriers to saying ‘no’ in unsafe situations, perceived differences between resource poor and developed world settings and the degree to which students refused or consented to participation in events outside of the ‘norms’ of their own training experience. Three hundred seventy-nine students participated. 45% were asked to do something “not permissible” at home. 27% were asked to do something they felt “uncomfortable” with, often an invasive clinical task. Half asked to do something not usually permissible were “comfortable”. 48% felt it more acceptable to bypass guidelines in developing settings. 27% refused an offer outside their experience. Of interest are reasons for “going along with” uncomfortable invitations, e.g. “emergency”, self-belief in ‘capability’ and being ‘more qualified’ than host-personnel. This “best pair of hands available” merits scrutiny. Adverse scenarios were not exclusive to developing settings. We discuss preparing students for decision-making in new contexts, and address whether ‘home’ processes are too inflexible to prepare students for ‘real’ medical life? Ethical decision-making and communicating reluctance should be included in elective preparation.
机译:在选修课上,学生可能并不总是清楚地保护自己和他人。安置位置必须安全且具有道德基础,这一点很重要。医学院的关注点是让他们的学生在远离家乡的地方接触和应对不舒适和/或不熟悉的要求,在这些地方,他们的舒适性或安全性或患者的舒适性和安全性可能会受到损害。这可能需要学生方面的法律,道德和/或道德推理。本文的目的是确定学生在选修课上实际遇到的情况,为更好地为学生提供安全和符合道德的医疗安排做准备。我们讨论了我们研究结果的含义,这些结论可以说适用于研究生培训的其他领域,例如资格后的第一个医疗角色。在返回的最后三年选修医学学生的3年中,发布了一项匿名调查,探讨了有关选修课的临床和道德困境。问题包括遇到的潜在不安全情况的发生率和类型,在不安全情况下说“不”的障碍,资源贫乏与发达世界环境之间的感知差异以及学生拒绝或同意参加“规范”以外事件的程度自己的培训经验。三百九十九名学生参加了。 45%的人被要求在家中做“不被允许的事情”。 27%的人被要求做一些他们觉得“不舒服”的事情,通常是一项侵入性的临床任务。一半被要求做通常不被允许的事情是“舒适的”。 48%的人认为在开发环境中绕过指南更容易接受。 27%的人拒绝了他们的提议。令人感兴趣的是“伴随”不舒服的邀请的原因,例如“紧急”,对“能力”的自信心以及比接待人员更“合格”的能力。这个“最好的双手”值得仔细研究。不利的情况不是开发设置所独有的。我们讨论了让学生为在新环境中进行决策做准备,并讨论“家庭”流程是否太过灵活以至于无法为学生准备“真实”医疗生活?道德的决策和沟通的勉强应包括在选修课中。

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