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Patients' approaches to students' learning at a clinical education ward--an ethnographic study

It is well known that patients' involvement in health care students' learning is essential and gives students opportunities to experience clinical reasoning and practice clinical skills when interacting with patients. Students encounter patients in different contexts throughout their educa...

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Published in:BMC medical education 2014-07, Vol.14 (1), p.131-131, Article 131
Main Authors: Manninen, Katri, Henriksson, Elisabet Welin, Scheja, Max, Silén, Charlotte
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description It is well known that patients' involvement in health care students' learning is essential and gives students opportunities to experience clinical reasoning and practice clinical skills when interacting with patients. Students encounter patients in different contexts throughout their education. However, looking across the research providing evidence about learning related to patient-student encounters reveals a lack of knowledge about the actual learning process that occurs in encounters between patients and students. The aim of this study was to explore patient-student encounters in relation to students' learning in a patient-centered health-care setting. An ethnographic approach was used to study the encounters between patients and students. The setting was a clinical education ward for nursing students at a university hospital with eight beds. The study included 10 observations with 11 students and 10 patients. The observer followed one or two students taking care of one patient. During the fieldwork observational and reflective notes were taken. After each observation follow-up interviews were conducted with each patient and student separately. Data were analyzed using an ethnographic approach. The most striking results showed that patients took different approaches in the encounters with students. When the students managed to create a good atmosphere and a mutual relationship, the patients were active participants in the students' learning. If the students did not manage to create a good atmosphere, the relationship became one-way and the patients were passive participants, letting the students practice on their bodies but without engaging in a dialogue with the students. Patient-student encounters, at a clinical education ward with a patient-centred pedagogical framework, can develop into either a learning relationship or an attending relationship. A learning relationship is based on a mutual relationship between patients and students resulting in patients actively participating in students' learning and they both experience it as a joint action. An attending relationship is based on a one-way relationship between patients and students resulting in patients passively participating by letting students to practice on their bodies but without engaging in a learning dialogue with the students.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Analysis
Anthropology, Cultural
Attending relationship
Authenticity
Clinical Competence
Clinical education ward
Clinical medicine
Construction (Process)
Departments
Education
Education, Medical - methods
Ethnography
Female
Humans
Illnesses
Inpatients - psychology
Learning
Learning Processes
Learning relationship
Male
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Methods
Middle Aged
Neurosciences
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing care
Nursing education
Nursing Students
Observation
Occupational Therapy
Participant Observation
Patient safety
Patient-centeredness
Patient-student encounters
Patients
Physician-Patient Relations
Qualitative research
Students
Students, Medical - psychology
Supervisors
Teachers
Teaching Methods
Young Adult
title Patients' approaches to students' learning at a clinical education ward--an ethnographic study
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