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General practice: a leading provider of medical student education in the 21st century?

Jill E Thistlethwaite, Michael R Kidd and Judith N Hudson
Med J Aust 2007; 187 (2): 124-128. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2007.tb01160.x
Published online: 16 July 2007

For millennia, the training of doctors took place in the community under the apprenticeship model. Over the past 100 years, the principal location for medical learning has become the hospital — usually a tertiary care facility attached to a university medical school. However, in developed countries, the changing nature of health care provision and disease profiles has led to a reassessment of the optimum clinical settings in which students should learn. While student experience currently occurs predominantly in hospitals, patients are mainly diagnosed and treated in the community, with only short forays into inpatient care.1 Moreover, patients with chronic disease are now managed primarily within general practice, where the majority of health promotion and disease prevention is also carried out.2 It is time to consider whether the balance should shift towards a higher proportion of medical education delivery in community settings — particularly, but not exclusively, in general practice.

In 1988, the World Federation for Medical Education advocated a substantial transfer of education from teaching hospitals to community settings.3 In 1993, the General Medical Council in the United Kingdom recommended that students should have more community-based education to enhance their exposure to a more holistic delivery of health care.4 Resulting changes in medical education delivery were further influenced by a subsequent and ongoing reduction in the number of hospital beds,5 leading to an enhanced role for primary care and general practice. This role has been evaluated and endorsed.6 Over the past decade, an international body of evidence has added credence to the vision that general practice will become a major setting for medical student learning in Australia this century.

International evidence that general practice and community-based attachments do work

Newer models of educational delivery in general practice have been evaluated and compare favourably with hospital-based education. Students at University College London learn internal medicine both in a tertiary teaching hospital and in general practice, with 4 weeks in each setting. This has provided evidence that clinical skills and methods can be learnt as effectively in primary as in secondary care settings.12 Students endorse GP teaching of clinical skills13 and are more likely to develop a patient-centred approach to patient care14,15 and a shared decision-making model when learning communication skills in general practice settings.16

Longer longitudinal attachments have also been introduced. At Cambridge University, Nigel Oswald pioneered a general practice attachment that ran throughout the clinical years, with students following patients between primary and secondary care. This initiative developed into the Cambridge Graduate Course in 2001. Students spend 2 days a week in a general practice and 3 days in the local district hospital. An extensive qualitative and quantitative evaluation concluded that the course was regarded as a good model for training doctors by all stakeholders — GPs, hospital doctors, patients, practice staff and students.17 The difficulties in this program that the Cambridge team discuss have implications for general practice teaching and will be considered below under “Implications for general practice”.

In the United States, the outcomes of several medical school programs have supported primary care as a valuable setting for medical education.18,19 The Rural Physician Associate Program in Minnesota has been training students in rural communities for more that 30 years. Students recognise the value of a learning environment in which they experience continuity of care, and 62% of students trained by the program currently practise as primary care physicians.18

Australian evidence

In Australia, the Flinders Parallel Rural Community Curriculum, based on the Cambridge Graduate Course, involves senior students undertaking a whole clinical year in rural general practice, during which they learn internal medicine, paediatrics, women’s health and mental health, as well as the context of general practice itself.20 Students following the Parallel Rural Community Curriculum program perform better in written and clinical examinations than their hospital-based peers.21 In comparison with students in tertiary hospitals, the community-based students feel more valued by the supervising doctors and their patients and have greater opportunities to “meet the aspirations of both the community and government policy” and to “learn how their professional expectations can mesh with their own personal values”.22 Similar examination performance has been found for extended rural placements at the University of Queensland.23

General practice is also a fertile educational experience for pre-vocational doctors. General practice rotations for junior doctors have been part of Australian general practice training for decades, but have had a recent boost through the establishment of the Postgraduate General Practice Placement Program (PGPPP) in 2003. Interns have found that such posts provide them with learning opportunities not found in hospital rotations.24 An evaluation of similar posts in the UK showed that they offered a wide range of learning, including much that was community-specific, such as social factors in illness, referral and information technology skills. Moreover, general practice fostered more in-depth reflection on learning. The conclusion was that the UK scheme demonstrated a positive net educational impact in content and process.25

Proposed models and learning opportunities

Learning outcomes for general practice and community-based education are shown in Box 1. The challenge is to distinguish which learning outcomes are best pursued in which setting, based on educational value and cost-effectiveness. Students should learn in small groups in general practice in their early years, moving to longer and more intensive attachments in their senior years, with time spent in urban and rural settings. After graduation, we would advocate that all junior doctors have time within the PGPPP in the first and second postgraduate years.

GPs as teachers

To increase the amount of time that students and junior doctors spend in general practice at a time when medical student numbers are increasing26 will require a substantial increase in the number of GP teachers. There is already a network of trained GP educators. GP supervisors who provide vocational training for general practice registrars are required to attend professional development courses in medical education as part of their contracts. Many of these GPs also provide training through the PGPPP and have medical students within their practices. The regionalised training model established initially by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners and now rolled out through the 22 regional training providers across Australia has increased the number of teaching practices and GP supervisors. Australian Government requirements for registrars to gain experience in rural and outer metropolitan general practice have also provided opportunities for new teaching practices. This has created a cohort of GP educators who may not only become more involved in medical student teaching, but who can also act as mentors for new tutors. Moreover, academic units of general practice have been recruiting and training more GPs to teach within universities as well as in the community. Studies have shown that GPs enjoy teaching, that it increases their morale and that it encourages them to keep up-to-date.27,28 These positive benefits should help retain existing teachers and recruit new ones. However, more GPs will be needed, at a time when the workforce is ageing, and the emphasis has to be on quality as well as quantity.

The new junior doctor and GP vocational training curricula recognise the need for doctors-in-training to develop expertise in educational delivery. General practice registrars, like hospital-based registrars, will have a major role in teaching medical students, which will benefit the registrars, the students and the supervisors.

The case for community-based education in relation to general practice workforce issues

General practice as a career choice had declined in popularity during the past 10 years.26 The crisis in recruitment and retention of rural doctors is well known.29 There are a number of factors that appear to promote general practice as a career, including higher-quality and longer general practice attachments with positive GP role models.30 The main factor affecting a doctor’s choice to practise in a rural location is whether he or she has a rural background,31 although positive experiences during training and having longer attachments in rural areas have some impact.32 Early findings from the UK, where doctors in the first 2 years after graduation work for 4 months in general practice, are that the number of doctors intending to train as GPs has started to rise.33,34

Implications for general practice

With increasing student numbers and a less than optimal number of GPs, it is difficult to see how this model will work without a national plan, as proposed in Box 2. Australian medical student numbers are projected to increase by 81% — from 1348 in 2005 to 2442 in 201226 — with a subsequent rise in the number of junior doctors. These numbers do not include fee-paying international students and international students on elective terms seeking experience in Australian general practice.

If every student and junior doctor, as well as general practice registrar, is to spend a quality amount of time in general practice, this has major implications not only for medical schools and general practices, but also for practice staff, patients and government funding (Box 3).35 While the evaluation report of the Cambridge Graduate Course found that having students for long times in general practice did not adversely affect patient satisfaction and did not markedly disrupt practices as a whole, GPs did find that their expanded teaching role was tiring and added to the complexity and pressure of their work.17

Many GPs wish to teach but do not have space in their practices for students to be actively involved in seeing patients. They are concerned about their lack of training in medical education. Many feel they do not have the time to devote to quality student teaching because of the demands of patient care. If GPs take students under these circumstances, it may be that students will simply observe clinical interactions rather than interact with patients themselves. Many practices will need additional rooms if they are to provide this level of experience, but who will be expected to pay for the building works? — the practices or the local community, the universities or the government? In rural areas, safe and adequate accommodation is needed for students. This is in short supply in many areas, and the amount of available local hospital accommodation is inadequate for projected needs. The model of students living with rural doctor families is not sustainable if student numbers increase and attachments become longer. The reliance on health professional altruism to provide quality education to increasing numbers of students will not sustain this enhanced model.

In relation to general practice medical education funding, the Australian Association of Academic General Practitioners recommends:

We would also like to see:

Conclusion

Clearly, a new set of principles and educational strategies is needed to ensure there are enough doctors with the right skills in the places where we need them. General practice-based education will meet the calls to

The ideal clinical environment for all student and prevocational doctors will deliver the right mix of community and hospital-based learning.

2 Requirements for a national plan to take forward the vision of general practice as a leading site for medical education

  • Jill E Thistlethwaite1
  • Michael R Kidd2
  • Judith N Hudson3

  • 1 Centre for Innovation in Professional Health Education and Research, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW.
  • 2 Department of General Practice, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW.
  • 3 Division of Clinical Education, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW.


Correspondence: jthistle@med.usyd.edu.au

Competing interests:

None identified.

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