Canadian Medical Education Journal
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643
(FIVE YEARS 367)

H-INDEX

12
(FIVE YEARS 3)

Published By The Association Of Faculties Of Medicine Of Canada

1923-1202

Author(s):  
Julia E Hanes ◽  
Jordana L Waserman ◽  
Quinten K Clarke

Author(s):  
Anne Xuan-Lan Nguyen ◽  
Marie-Lyne Bélair ◽  
Ian Clark ◽  
Karim F Damji ◽  
Émilie Goodyear ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ming K Li ◽  
Evan Tang ◽  
Calandra Li ◽  
Joyce Nyhof-Young
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Jennifer LP Protudjer ◽  
Jackie Gruber ◽  
Dylan Mckay ◽  
Linda Larcombe

Introduction: The shift to remote working/learning to slow transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus has had widespread mental health impacts. We aimed to describe how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the mental health of students and faculty within a health sciences faculty at a central Canadian university. Methods: Via an online survey, we queried mental health in the first four months of the COVID-19 pandemic quantitatively (scale: 1 (most negative)-100 (most positive)) and qualitatively. Results: The sample (n = 110) was predominantly women (faculty 39/59; [66.1%]; students 46/50; [92.0%]). Most faculty were married/common law (50/60; [84.8%]) and had children at home (36/60; [60.0%]); the opposite was true for most students.  Faculty and students self-reported comparable mental health (40.47±24.26 and 37.62±26.13; respectively). Amongst women, those with vs. without children at home, reported significantly worse mental health impacts (31.78±23.68 vs. 44.29±27.98; respectively, p = 0.032). Qualitative themes included: “Sharing resources,” “spending money,” “few changes,” for those without children at home; “working at home can be isolating,” including the subtheme, “balancing act”: “working in isolation,” “working more,” for those with children at home. Discussion: Amongst women in academia, including both students and faculty, those with children at home have disproportionately worse mental health than those without children at home.


Author(s):  
Timothy Chaplin ◽  
Heather Braund ◽  
Adam Szulewski ◽  
Nancy Dalgarno ◽  
Rylan Egan ◽  
...  

Background: The direct observation and assessment of learners’ resuscitation skills by an attending physician is challenging due to the unpredictable and time-sensitive nature of these events. Multisource feedback (MSF) may address this challenge and improve the quality of assessments provided to learners. We aimed to describe the similarities and differences in the assessment rationale of attending physicians, registered nurses, and resident peers in the context of a simulation-based resuscitation curriculum. Methods: We conducted a qualitative content analysis of narrative MSF of medical residents in their first postgraduate year of training who were participating in a simulation-based resuscitation course at two Canadian institutions. Assessments included an entrustment score and narrative comments from attending physicians, registered nurses, and resident peers in addition to self-assessment. Narrative comments were transcribed and analyzed thematically using a constant comparative method. Results: All 87 residents (100%) participating in the 2017-2018 course provided consent. A total of 223 assessments were included in our analysis. Four themes emerged from the narrative data: 1) Communication, 2) Leadership, 3) Demeanor, and 4) Medical Expert. Relative to other assessor groups, feedback from nurses focused on patient-centred care and communication while attending physicians focused on the medical expert theme. Peer feedback was the most positive. Self-assessments included comments within each of the four themes. Conclusions: In the context of a simulation-based resuscitation curriculum, MSF provided learners with different perspectives in their narrative assessment rationale and may offer a more holistic assessment of resuscitation skills within a competency-based medical education (CBME) program of assessment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Marcel F D'Eon ◽  
Mayland Reilly ◽  
Renee Page

Author(s):  
Carrie Cartmill ◽  
Cynthia Whitehead ◽  
Esther Ihekwoaba ◽  
Ritika Goel ◽  
Samantha Green ◽  
...  

Background: As a paradigm of education that emphasizes equity and social justice, transformative education aims to improve societal structures by inspiring learners to become agents of social change. In an attempt to contribute to transformative education, the University of Toronto MD program implemented a workshop on poverty and health that included tutors with lived experience of poverty. This research aimed to examine how tutors, as members of a group that faces structural oppression, understood their participation in the workshop. Methods: This research drew on qualitative case study methodology and interview data, using the concept of transformative education to direct data analysis and interpretation. Results: Our findings centred around two broad themes: misalignments between transformative learning and the structures of medical education; and unintended consequences of transformative education within the dominant paradigms of medical education. These misalignments and unintended consequences provided insight into how courses operating within the structures, hierarchies and paradigms of medical education may be limited in their potential to contribute to transformative education. Conclusions: To be truly transformative, medical education must be willing to try to modify structures that reinforce oppression rather than integrating marginalized persons into educational processes that maintain social inequity.


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