DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1735230 - volume 43 - Novembro 2021
Michelle Araújo Machado, Elaine Lira Medeiros
Residency is considered the gold standard of specialization programs, and its purpose is to improve the professional competency acquired during the undergraduate medicine course. In addition to teaching knowledge and skills, it also enhances the students' relationship attributes, postures, and attitudes needed to achieve medical professionalism. The resident learns through a wide range of techniques, thus achieving professional quality in its fullness.1234
The figure of the preceptor has been a part of medical education for many years. And if medical residency has been documented since 1889, learning from more experienced doctors has been recognized since the dawn of medicine,4 for they provide guidance, support, teaching, and knowledge of their experiences.5
Despite having an extremely important role in the training of medical students, residency preceptors have little experience with pedagogical training. Without an adequate follow-up from them, students are left loose and unassisted; thus, exposed to poor practices that will have a negative influence on their education.6 When exercising preceptorship, the doctor must master not only clinical knowledge, but they must be able to transform field experience into teaching, in addition to conveying pedagogical knowledge.7
Regarding the pedagogical knowledge needed to train a preceptor, gaps are evident.8910 On the other hand, higher-education institutions have been pressured to change the way these professionals are qualified, and are currently meeting the demand to form instructors who can transform realities. The guidelines for medical syllabi corroborate this idea of critical and reflective teaching through the implementation of methodologies that encourage students to learn and to reflect upon social reality.11
Active learning, which emerged in the 1960s, is a teaching-learning strategy based on problematization to reach and motivate the student through keen involvement in their training, while the preceptor acts only as a facilitator. Its use can be the solution to develop student autonomy, forming creative, reflective, and independent professionals.1213
In 1992, researchers from the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Washington14 introduced, in outpatient clinics, a new model of preceptorship which could also be used in emergency rooms and wards. The model's theory provides the preceptor with the ability to convey valuable medical information to their students in a fast and effective manner, and to comprehend the particularities of each student. Called One-Minute Preceptor (OMP), this medical teaching model was developed to be used when a student or resident, after assessing a clinical case, requests the assistance of their preceptor to solve problems. It consists of five fundamentals steps (microskills): 1) get a commitment: getting a commitment from the learner about what is going on with the patient, asking them to state the probable diagnoses; 2) probe for supporting evidence: probe the learner for their underlying reasoning, encouraging them to state aspects regarding the differential diagnosis; 3) teach general rules: based on the answers to steps 1 and 2, teach general principles about the clinical case; 4) reinforce what was done right: provide positive and formative feedback to the learner; and 5) correct mistakes: correct errors for future performance.14
Some authors15 suggest the OMP model as a framework for an efficient and precise preceptorship, which enables learning in limited time due to patient-care demands. Considering the relevance of this issue, the present study aimed to analyze the effect of the OMP model on preceptors who work at the emergency department of a maternity teaching hospital in northeastern Brazil.
The present was a cross-sectional study associated with the Obstetrics and Gynecology (OBG-GYN) residency program at a maternity teaching hospital in the city of Natal, Brazil. Data collection occurred between August and November 2019. Of the 28 eligible preceptors who worked at the Emergency Department, 15 volunteered to participate in a training course. As for the residents, 24 out of 28 answered surveys before and after the educational intervention alongside with the preceptors.
Initially, a face-to-face survey was applied to OB-GYN residents to identify their sociodemographic characteristics, the year of residence they were attending, questions regarding the teaching methods used by the preceptors, the feedback, and their impressions on the quality of teaching (questionnaire A).
The training course was held in October 2019, at the maternity auditorium; it lasted 3 hours, and was taught during the night shift. A badge containing the OMP steps on the back was given to each tutor.
First, there was a seminar on the OMP addressing the following topics: 1) difficulties encountered while exercising preceptorship; 2) the need for educational training courses; 3) division between teaching and practice in a high-flow environment; 4) professional competency versus pedagogical competency; 5) comparison between the traditional and active methodologies; and 6) presentation of the OMP, step by step. Questions and further discussions were held at the end of the lecture.
Later, role-playing was performed by a fellow and a resident; both had previously been trained by the researcher. The case study was about severe preeclampsia, and it was managed in two contrasting ways: the first one, by an “inadequate” tutor, using the traditional approach, without considering the student's autonomy, and the second, using the OMP. After the role-play, some preceptors were invited to reproduce case discussions using the OMP model.
In the end, a satisfaction survey (questionnaire B) was applied to assess the duration of the course, the teaching method, the applicability of the OMP model, and the degree of comfort in providing feedback; the survey also contained a blank space for suggestions and critiques. Thirty days after the training, another survey (questionnaire C) was answered, in person, by the residents about their perceptions of the OMP and its applicability during shifts.
At first, a database was created to organize the data. Next, tables of absolute and relative frequencies were built to characterize the residents regarding their sociodemographic characteristics and to analyze questionnaires A, B, and C, whose alternatives were planned according to the Likert scale.16 For the data analysis, we used the Microsoft Office Excel (Microsoft Corp., Redmond, WA, US) software, version 2016, and the McNamer test. The second one was used for the quantitative analysis of the paired variables to verify the association between two categorical variables (receiving feedback before and after). A significance level of 5% was adopted for all tests. The statistical analysis was performed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, US) software, version 21.
The study was approved by the institutional Ethics in Research Committee under protocol number 3.483.115, CAAE 17211319.6.0000.5292, in August 2019. A consent form was provided to the preceptors and residents who took part in the study.
The results of the survey results are presented in three subtopics: the first one contains data from the residents before the intervention; the second one contains information from the preceptors; and the third contains data from residents after the training with the preceptors.
The study identified that 91.7% (n = 22) of the residents completely or partially agreed that there were differences in the methodology used by the preceptors: 54.2% (n = 13) agreed completely, and 37.5% (n = 9), partially. We noted that 62.5% (n = 15) of the residents partially agreed that the central figure in the teaching-learning process was the preceptor-patient relationship. Regarding the stimulation of clinical reasoning, 71% (n = 17) of the residents felt they were partially (41.8%) or totally (29.2%) active in the teaching-learning process. On the other hand, 75% (n = 18) disagreed, totally (46%) or partially (29%), about receiving feedback. However, 70.8% (n = 17) rated the quality of the teaching as good.
The preceptors were predominantly female (93.3%) and associated with the state-owned Empresa Brasileira de Serviços Hospitalares (Brazilian Hospital Services Company, EBSERH, in Portuguese) (80%). They joined the training on the OMP model and subsequently evaluated the intervention. They indicated that the duration of the course was adequate, the presentation was satisfactory, and the role-playing was easy to understand.
The data showed that 86.7% (n = 13) of the preceptors agreed that the OMP model involves the student in the decision-making process, and 93.3% (n = 14) agreed, totally (60%) or partially (33.3%), that the OMP would streamline the service flow. All participants indicated that they would start applying the model to their routines.
As for the provision of feedback, after the training, 86.7% (n = 13) of the preceptors answered that they felt comfortable, and only 13.3% (n = 2) reported they felt uncomfortable doing it. We also observed that these preceptors did not provide feedback regularly due to the lack of training and did not undermine the residents' self-esteem.
At the end of the satisfaction survey, 7 (25%) preceptors suggested increasing the number of on-call staff to make the application of the model easier, the provision of ongoing education for them, a unification of their conduct, more time to discuss the cases, and issues regarding team recycling.
After the training, 66.67% (n = 16) of the residents agreed that the cases started to be discussed using the OMP model. Table 1 shows the result of the McNamer test used to assess the frequencies of two related samples. A statistically significant change was noted for the feedback received by the residents before and after the training: from 20.8% to 66.7% (p = 0.021) (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1
Perception of the residents on receiving feedback before and after the intervention.
| Receiving feedback | Before | After | Total | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
| Totally disagree | 11 (45.83) | 02 (8.33) | 13 (27.07) | |
| Partially disagree | 07 (29.17) | 03 (12.50) | 10 (20.83) | |
| Indifferent | 01 (4.17) | 03 (12.50) | 04 (8.34) | 0.021 |
| Partially agree | 04 (16.67) | 10 (41.67) | 14 (29.18) | |
| Totally agree | 01 (4.16) | 06 (25.00) | 07 (14.58) | |
| Total | 24 (100.00) | 24 (100.00) | 48 (100.00) |
Table 1
Perception of the residents on receiving feedback before and after the intervention using the McNamer test with a significance level of 5%
A total of 33 (95.8%) residents also agreed that the OMP is a more interesting model than other traditional teaching methods, and only 4.2% (n = 1), totally disagreed with the OMP. Finally, 70.9% of the residents completely agreed that there was an improvement in teaching and learning using the OMP model.
The present study showed that the preceptors who conducted the training on the OMP recognized that the model engages the student in the decision-making process and improves the service flow. All preceptors agreed to incorporate the model into their routines.
Likewise, an American study17 conducted in 2018 offered workshops on the OMP to 294 staff physicians and 98 residents from 21 different medical specialties and subspecialties, at 16 different teaching hospitals, and found that 97% of participants would use the method frequently, even daily. It also established that the presentation and discussion of the model followed by role-playing, the same resources used in our study, can be effective to instruct the participants on the use of the OMP.
A recent article18 from a Nursing college in Washington reported training 58 preceptors using methodologies focused on clinical teaching, and, among them, the OMP model. All participants rated the steps of the method as useful or very useful. Therefore, the authors pointed out that training preceptors in evidence-based and efficient strategies, such as the OMP, is feasible and effective.
A study19 performed 2019 in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil, identified that, after training preceptors using the OMP, the implementation of the model for physiotherapy students was positively analyzed by both preceptors and students. The study also showed that preceptors trained using the method had improved regarding the provision of feedback and the teaching of critical reasoning to students.
The relevant data found by the present study was the significant increase in the provision of feedback after the intervention, thus contributing to improve the teaching-learning process. The residents considered feedback an important learning tool, and they valued teachers who knew how to provide it effectively.
A research20 performed with interns and residents (n = 3,471) of the outpatient clinics of five medical schools in Ontario, Canada, investigated the location characteristics and preceptor behaviors that contributed to the students' learning. It was then identified that 95% considered that providing feedback constructively is an essential attribute of the preceptor, taking second place among 36 other teaching skills listed, being surpassed only by the ability to be open to questions.
Nonetheless, a study21 performed in Singapore, using a method similar to ours, involved 37 preceptors who were trained in workshops on OMP and 34 dentistry residents who evaluated them. The perceptions about clinical teaching were assessed before and after the training, and the authors concluded that the short duration of the training impaired the quantity and quality of the education. Thus, this study showed that a single workshop for faculty members did not substantially improve the perceptions of the residents regarding the quality or quantity of the education, which indicates that training should be ongoing.
There was good acceptability of the OMP model by the preceptors. Moreover, the model was inserted in a standardized manner in the emergency work routine of the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, as well as in the case discussions of the residents, who reported more autonomy provided by the model. In addition, there was an increase in the stimulus to clinical reasoning and to provide feedback, which were previously weak, and started to be provided regularly by the preceptors. Therefore, training preceptors on the OMP showed to be an important, viable, and effective strategy. Further training and investigations are needed to assess how this method develops in the long term.