How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future
Abstract Background Primary care has been under-represented in its contribution to the academic literature base on Covid-19 developments. We sought to understand how teaching and learning was modified and developed by primary care academic leaders to support the continuation of primary care-orientat...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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BMC
2023-10-01
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Series: | BMC Medical Education |
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04710-6 |
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author | Michael Harrison Lauren Hall Hugh Alberti |
author_facet | Michael Harrison Lauren Hall Hugh Alberti |
author_sort | Michael Harrison |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Abstract Background Primary care has been under-represented in its contribution to the academic literature base on Covid-19 developments. We sought to understand how teaching and learning was modified and developed by primary care academic leaders to support the continuation of primary care-orientated learning during the Covid-19 pandemic; and explore how these changes may shape future educational delivery in primary care. Methods We adopted a qualitative approach, using semi-structured interviews of seven General Practice Heads of Teaching (GP HoTs) from UK medical schools. We used mixed deductive and inductive coding to analyse interview transcripts. Modifications and developments were coded to four a priori themes (clinical off-site; clinical on-site; synchronous remote; asynchronous remote). We concurrently used inductive coding to identify developments that did not readily fit into these categories. To understand how participants perceived the developments may shape primary care teaching in the future, we carried out an inductive thematic analysis. Results A range of modifications and developments were described. Examples of developments include: GP practices being provided with increased flexibility to support ongoing provision of clinical placements (on-site clinical), examples of initiatives enabling students to consult remotely from their homes (off-site clinical), transfer of face-to-face teaching to remote formats (synchronous remote) and development of new, interactive on-line teaching materials (asynchronous remote). One additional theme arose inductively: collaboration and co-operation. For future implications, five themes arose: the evolution of flexible and hybrid clinical placement models; an increased role for telemedicine; increased networking and collaboration; increased active student involvement in patient care; and opportunities for community-based teaching afforded by the pandemic. Conclusion This study highlights how teaching was modified to support the continuation of primary care-based learning during the Covid-19 pandemic, and implications for the future. Collaboration and placement flexibility were notable features in the response. Participants perceived that flexible placement models containing a mixture of clinical on-site with remote synchronous and asynchronous teaching and learning activities, may persist into the post-Covid era. Further research is required to understand which developments become routinely embedded into primary care teaching in the post-Covid era and explain how and why this occurs. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-10T17:37:37Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-7c2448d9e9ee41e0b91eac31e00a3c3e |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 1472-6920 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-10T17:37:37Z |
publishDate | 2023-10-01 |
publisher | BMC |
record_format | Article |
series | BMC Medical Education |
spelling | doaj.art-7c2448d9e9ee41e0b91eac31e00a3c3e2023-11-20T09:48:02ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202023-10-0123111210.1186/s12909-023-04710-6How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the futureMichael Harrison0Lauren Hall1Hugh Alberti2School of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversitySchool of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversitySchool of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversityAbstract Background Primary care has been under-represented in its contribution to the academic literature base on Covid-19 developments. We sought to understand how teaching and learning was modified and developed by primary care academic leaders to support the continuation of primary care-orientated learning during the Covid-19 pandemic; and explore how these changes may shape future educational delivery in primary care. Methods We adopted a qualitative approach, using semi-structured interviews of seven General Practice Heads of Teaching (GP HoTs) from UK medical schools. We used mixed deductive and inductive coding to analyse interview transcripts. Modifications and developments were coded to four a priori themes (clinical off-site; clinical on-site; synchronous remote; asynchronous remote). We concurrently used inductive coding to identify developments that did not readily fit into these categories. To understand how participants perceived the developments may shape primary care teaching in the future, we carried out an inductive thematic analysis. Results A range of modifications and developments were described. Examples of developments include: GP practices being provided with increased flexibility to support ongoing provision of clinical placements (on-site clinical), examples of initiatives enabling students to consult remotely from their homes (off-site clinical), transfer of face-to-face teaching to remote formats (synchronous remote) and development of new, interactive on-line teaching materials (asynchronous remote). One additional theme arose inductively: collaboration and co-operation. For future implications, five themes arose: the evolution of flexible and hybrid clinical placement models; an increased role for telemedicine; increased networking and collaboration; increased active student involvement in patient care; and opportunities for community-based teaching afforded by the pandemic. Conclusion This study highlights how teaching was modified to support the continuation of primary care-based learning during the Covid-19 pandemic, and implications for the future. Collaboration and placement flexibility were notable features in the response. Participants perceived that flexible placement models containing a mixture of clinical on-site with remote synchronous and asynchronous teaching and learning activities, may persist into the post-Covid era. Further research is required to understand which developments become routinely embedded into primary care teaching in the post-Covid era and explain how and why this occurs.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04710-6Covid-19Primary careUndergraduateClinical Placement |
spellingShingle | Michael Harrison Lauren Hall Hugh Alberti How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future BMC Medical Education Covid-19 Primary care Undergraduate Clinical Placement |
title | How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future |
title_full | How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future |
title_fullStr | How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future |
title_full_unstemmed | How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future |
title_short | How will the Covid-19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching? Understanding modifications and developments deployed by UK academic units of primary care, and their implications for the future |
title_sort | how will the covid 19 pandemic shape the future of primary care undergraduate teaching understanding modifications and developments deployed by uk academic units of primary care and their implications for the future |
topic | Covid-19 Primary care Undergraduate Clinical Placement |
url | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04710-6 |
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