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U.S. National Library of Medicine


  • Title: Medical students' perceptions of identity in communication skills training: a qualitative study.
    Author: VĂ¥gan A.
    Journal: Med Educ; 2009 Mar; 43(3):254-9. PubMed ID: 19250352.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVES: Communication skills training in undergraduate medical education is considered to play an important role in medical students' formation of their professional identity. This qualitative study explores Year 1 students' perceptions of their identities when practising communication skills with real patients. METHODS: A total of 23 individual semi-structured interviews and two focus group discussions were conducted with 10 students during their first year of communication skills training. All interviews and discussions were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed for emergent themes relating to identity. RESULTS: Students struggled to communicate professionally with patients because of a lack of clinical knowledge and skills. Consequently, students enacted other identities, yet patients perceived them differently, causing conversational ambiguities. DISCUSSION: Students' perceptions challenge educational goals, suggesting that there is limited potential for the formation of professional identity through early training. Teacher-doctors must acknowledge how students' low levels of clinical competence and patients' behaviour complicate students' identity formation.
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