Abstract
We describe and evaluate an innovative immersive 15 week final year assistantship in general practice. Evaluation data was taken from five years of routinely collected School data and available national comparative data. The assistantship aims to enable students to consolidate knowledge and hone their skills through central participation in the care of large numbers of patients with acute and long term conditions. We estimate that most students consulted with over 450 patients during the assistantship. Students report that they became useful to their practice teams, had multiple episodes of feedback on their performance which they found useful and, in the school exit survey, reported that they were highly prepared for practice. 9.4 per cent of students reported that the assistantship was ‘too long’ and, especially those who completed the assistantship in the second semester, they were out of hospital for too long before F1. Some described a learning ‘plateau’ after the 10th week which was addressed by modifications to the assistantship. Nevertheless, in national surveys, our graduates’ self-reported preparedness for practice is high, a perception shared by their F1 supervisors. General practice can make a valuable contribution to the education of senior medical students and contribute to their preparedness for practice.
Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge and thank current and past members of the academic GP team who contributed to recruitment, development and retention of teaching practices (D Blanchard, P Coventry, F Hay, C Hyde, K Jensen, R Jones, I Laws, J Lefroy, M Mehta, K Owens, S Smithson, C Todd), the past and present members of the placements team (M Bourke, A Clowes, S Thirlwall, J Wilde, A Woodward), V Hooper who managed, and C Harrison who supervised the School’s evaluation from which we have used data, A Machin, Undergraduate Services and Support Manager who provided the student numbers and J Lefroy again for her critical reading of a late draught of the paper. We particularly want to thank R Hays (now of the James Cook University, Australia) whose initial support and encouragement as Head of School was essential to the success of the assistantship and, finally, our network of teaching practices across Staffordshire, Shropshire and neighbouring counties whose engagement with and support for the assistantship was both essential and is evident in the students’ evaluation of the teaching they provided and learning they supported.