Students' perceptions of time spent during clinical rotations
Some rotations during clinical education are characterized by a high number of hours spent per week in the hospital because students panicipate in a hospital on-call system, i.e. hours beyond usual working hours, e.g. at night. However, students complain about spending too many hours in the hospital...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medical teacher 2001, Vol.23 (5), p.471-475 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Some rotations during clinical education are characterized
by a high number of hours spent per week in the
hospital because students panicipate in a hospital on-call
system, i.e. hours beyond usual working hours, e.g. at night.
However, students complain about spending too many hours in
the hospital on non-instructive activities. This study was
undertaken to investigate differences among rotations in time
spent in hospital, in on-call hours, in self-study and in non-instructive
activities and to investigate the relationship between
time spent on the various activities and the overall effectiveness
as perceived by students. A questionnaire was administered to
students at the end of various clinical rotations. Rotations differ
considerably in time spent in hospital, on call (i.e. beyond
usual working hours), on self-study and on non-instructive
activities. In some rotations students report spending on
average 18-20% of their time in the hospital on non-instructive
activities. Furthermore, the numbers of hours spent in
hospital do not correlate with the overall effectiveness as
perceived by students, unless the numbers of hours spent in
non-instructive activities are taken into account. The effectiveness
of a rotation does not automatically improve if students
spend more hours in hospital. The number of hours spent on
non-instructive activities should be reduced in some rotations
and should be kept as low as possible. Further research is
needed to find out which activities are perceived as non-instructive. |
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ISSN: | 0142-159X 1466-187X |
DOI: | 10.1080/01421590120075706 |