Loading…

A scoping review of self‐monitoring in graduate medical education

Background Physicians and physicians‐in‐training have repeatedly demonstrated poor accuracy of global self‐assessments, which are assessments removed from the context of a specific task, regardless of any intervention. Self‐monitoring, an in‐the‐moment self‐awareness of one's performance, offer...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Medical education 2023-09, Vol.57 (9), p.795-806
Main Authors: Johnson, William Rainey, Durning, Steven J., Allard, Rhonda J., Barelski, Adam M., Artino, Anthony R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background Physicians and physicians‐in‐training have repeatedly demonstrated poor accuracy of global self‐assessments, which are assessments removed from the context of a specific task, regardless of any intervention. Self‐monitoring, an in‐the‐moment self‐awareness of one's performance, offers a promising alternative to global self‐assessment. The purpose of this scoping review is to better understand the state of self‐monitoring in graduate medical education. Methods We performed a scoping review following Arksey and O'Malley's six steps: identifying a research question, identifying relevant studies, selecting included studies, charting the data, collating and summarising the results and consulting experts. Our search queried Ovid Medline, Web of Science, PsychINFO, Eric and EMBASE databases from 1 January 1999 to 12 October 2022. Results The literature search yielded 5363 unique articles. The authors identified 77 articles for inclusion. The search process helped create a framework to identify self‐monitoring based on time and context dependence. More than 20 different terms were used to describe self‐monitoring, and only 13 studies (17%) provided a definition for the equivalent term. Most research focused on post‐performance self‐judgements of a procedural skill (n = 31, 42%). Regardless of task, studies focused on self‐judgement (n = 66, 86%) and measured the accuracy or impact on performance of self‐monitoring (n = 41, 71%). Most self‐monitoring was conducted post‐task (n = 65, 84%). Conclusion Self‐monitoring is a time‐ and context‐dependent phenomenon that seems promising as a research focus to improve clinical performance of trainees in graduate medical education and beyond. The landscape of current literature on self‐monitoring is sparse and heterogeneous, suffering from a lack of theoretical underpinning, inconsistent terminology and insufficiently clear definitions. This scoping review explores self‐monitoring in GME and presents a framework defining self‐monitoring based on time‐ and context‐dependence. It reflects how self‐monitoring can improve to impact performance.
ISSN:0308-0110
1365-2923
DOI:10.1111/medu.15023