Edinburgh Medical Students Peculiarly Described as ‘Occasional Auditors’

2005 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 207-217
Author(s):  
Harold T Swan

The phrase ‘occasional auditor’ appears to have been coined by a Royal Commission of 1826–32 to describe students who attended classes but did not intend to graduate. ‘Occasional’ meant ‘infrequent’, ‘auditor’ meant ‘listener’, and the Commission paid scant attention to these students. At the Edinburgh Medical School, however, such non-graduating students significantly outnumbered the graduates, and this can be shown to have been the case from as early as 1726 and to have continued until 1858, particular attention being paid here to the last two decades (i.e. 1839–58). There is no existing Edinburgh University list of ‘occasional auditors’, but a methodology of cross-referencing is described which makes it possible to identify the ‘occasional auditors' by name. ‘Occasional auditors' in the Faculty of Medicine can now be redefined as serious students who had assembled their own course of study in order to further their personal careers, and it is possible to show that very many of these careers were in medicine, largely in the emerging field of general practice.

2018 ◽  
Vol 68 (suppl 1) ◽  
pp. bjgp18X697229
Author(s):  
Matthew Webb ◽  
Sarah Thirlwall ◽  
Bob McKinley

BackgroundInformed consent is required for active participation of patients in medical education. At Keele Medical School, we require practices to advertise that they teach undergraduate students and to obtain appropriate patient consent at various stages of the patient journey.AimThe study aimed to explore patients’ experience of consent to involvement in undergraduate medical education in general practice.MethodDuring the final year at Keele University Medical School, students undertake a patient satisfaction survey. A questionnaire was attached to the reverse of this survey during the academic year 2016–2017. The questionnaire explored the stage of the patient journey consent was obtained, whether they were offered an alternative appointment and how comfortable they were with medical students being involved in their care.ResultsA total of 489 questionnaires were completed covering 62 GP practices. 97% of patients reported that consent was obtained at least once during their encounter and the majority reported that this occurred at booking. 98% of patients were comfortable or very comfortable with a medical student leading their consultation. However, 28% of those surveyed stated that they were either not given the option of not seeing the student or there was no other alternative appointment available.ConclusionThe results indicate that in the vast majority of cases patient consent is obtained at least once during their attendance. Patients expressed a high level of satisfaction with medical students’ involvement in their care. Further work is required to evaluate the role of the data as a marker of individual practice teaching quality.


2007 ◽  
Vol 191 (3) ◽  
pp. 268-270
Author(s):  
Michael King

Choosing ten books that have most influenced my practice is an odd challenge. I wasn't one of those medical students who wanted to do psychiatry since he was 12, or read most of Freud or Jung. In fact throughout medical school, and for several years as a junior doctor, I thought psychiatry and psychiatrists were pretty weird. It was only in my general practice vocational training year that I realised how much of medicine concerned the psychological and began my psychiatric training. This influence came not through books that I read but through the patients whom I saw.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Humairah Zainal ◽  
Helen Elizabeth Smith

Abstract Background: Singapore needs more family doctors to care for its ageing population and their chronic conditions. To boost the recruitment of doctors within primary care, we need to better understand medical students’ attitudes and experience of General Practice and Family Medicine. While many studies have explored the facilitators and barriers to teaching undergraduate medical students in this field of medicine from the perspectives of GP teachers and trainers, few have examined students’ exposure to primary care in medical schools. Although there are works on factors influencing students’ attitudes towards primary care careers, the roles of medical schools, professional bodies and state institutions tend to be discussed independently of one another. This article explores medical students’ perceptions towards careers in primary care and how different stakeholders might collaborate in strengthening the medical school experience. Methods: Six focus groups involving 54 students from three medical schools in Singapore were conducted. Discussions focussed on their primary care experience, their professional and career aspirations, and perceptions towards the opportunities and challenges of primary care careers. Thematic analysis was used to interpret the qualitative data. Results: 15 key themes emerged from the discussions; 10 reflected key concerns of pursuing primary care careers whereas 5 others highlighted their positive aspects. The former include society’s perceptions of primary care professions as sub-standard, specialists’ negative attitudes towards family doctors, the emphasis on the lifestyle benefits of primary care careers rather than their professional characteristics, mundane case mix, limited professional opportunities, lack of continuity of care, limited consultation time, low remuneration, need for business acumen, and conflicts created by business in clinical care. However, the respondents also articulated positive views, including its lifestyle benefits, autonomy of private practice and better patient care, opportunities for entrepreneurialism and a portfolio career, breadth of clinical problems presented, and an improved future for General Practice and Family Medicine. Conclusion: The findings demonstrate that coordinated initiatives from multiple stakeholders would help to increase the attractiveness of primary care as a career choice among students. Improvements in the medical school experience will significantly enhance the prestige of General Practice and Family Medicine.


2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (03) ◽  
pp. 388-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cormac Weekes Joyce ◽  
Shazrinizam Shaharan ◽  
Kate Lawlor ◽  
Melanie Elizabeth Burke ◽  
Michael John Kerin ◽  
...  

Background: Knowledge of hand anatomy and pathology is important for final year medical students as it frequently appears in examinations as a short case or in a written paper. Studies have shown that doctors in the Emergency Department have a deficient grasp of musculoskeletal anatomy secondary to a lack of dedicated teaching in medical school. Methods: A questionnaire was handed out to 111 final year medical students. Students were asked to fill it out before and after dedicated upper limb teaching sessions during their rotation. The questionnaire consisted of an anatomical and pathological component. Students were tested on basic anatomy and pathology of several common upper limb conditions. Results: There was a significant improvement in the medical students knowledge after the dedicated hand teaching. The identification of the carpal bones showed the most improvement overall. Conclusions: Basic musculoskeletal knowledge is essential to the practice of medicine. The majority of medical students gravitate towards a career in general practice or emergency medicine and good knowledge of upper limb anatomy is important. We have piloted a new interactive dedicated upper limb teaching module and have shown that there has been a significant improvement in students knowledge.


2019 ◽  
Vol 69 (suppl 1) ◽  
pp. bjgp19X703001
Author(s):  
Aidan Culhane ◽  
Patrick O’Dwyer ◽  
Andrew O’Regan ◽  
Liam Glynn

BackgroundAt 18 weeks duration, University of Limerick — Graduate Entry Medical School (UL–GEMS) has the longest general practice clinical attachment for medical students in Ireland and fulfils the educational criteria for a Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship (LIC).The longer the clinical placement the greater the imperative to see that these practices achieve satisfactory educational standards.AimThis project describes a quality assurance initiative of general practices that participate in the education of medical students at GEMS.MethodA literature review of previous quality assurance initiatives in relation to general practices that teach medical students was performed. Information gained from this process was then compared with UL-GEMS own criteria for teaching general practices. A set of criteria by for assessing teaching general practices was devised. The assessment process included a combination of self-assessment by the GP tutors and practice visits by the UL-GEMS teaching staff.ResultsNearly 100% of teaching practices had the correct teaching facilities, such as own room for the student or own computer. Suggested teaching methods, such as parallel consulting, as advised by the Department of General Practice were carried by 100% of practices. Use of the two-way feedback form and the GP/Student manual was poor. GP tutors requested more regular visits form the GP teaching staff as well as more guidance on content for formal tutorials so that a consistency teaching approach could be achieved.ConclusionThis was the first quality assurance initiative on an extended clinical placement. The knowledge gained will lead to a more inclusive standard setting process for teaching medical students in general practice settings.


BMJ Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. e026961 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Kumwenda ◽  
Jennifer Cleland ◽  
Gordon Prescott ◽  
Kim Walker ◽  
Peter Johnston

ObjectivesMany countries are driving forward policies to widen the socioeconomic profile of medical students and to train more medical students for certain specialties. However, little is known about how socioeconomic origin relates to specialty choice. Nor is there a good understanding of the relationship between academic performance and specialty choice. To address these gaps, our aim was to identify the relationship between socioeconomic background, academic performance and accepted offers into specialty training.DesignLongitudinal, cohort study using data from the UK Medical Education Database (https://www.ukmed.ac.uk/).Participants6065 (60% females) UK doctors who accepted offers to a specialty training (residency) post after completing the 2-year generic foundation programme (UK Foundation Programme) between 2012 and 2014.Main outcome measuresΧ2tests were used to examine the relationships between sociodemographic characteristics, academic ability and the dependent variable, specialty choice. Multiple data imputation was used to address the issue of missing data. Multinomial regression was employed to test the independent variables in predicting the likelihood of choosing a given specialty.ResultsParticipants pursuing careers in more competitive specialties had significantly higher academic scores than colleagues pursuing less competitive ones. After controlling for the presence of multiple factors, trainees who came from families where no parent was educated to a degree level had statistically significant lower odds of choosing careers in medical specialties relative to general practice (OR=0.78, 95% CI, 0.67 to 0.92). Students who entered medical school as school leavers, compared with mature students, had odds 1.2 times higher (95% CI, 1.04 to 1.56) of choosing surgical specialties than general practice.ConclusionsThe data indicate a direct association between trainees’ sociodemographic characteristics, academic ability and career choices. The findings can be used by medical school, training boards and workforce planners to inform recruitment and retention strategies.


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