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Risky business: medical students' feedback-seeking behaviours: a mixed methods study

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posted on 2024-06-13, 15:46 authored by Muirne SpoonerMuirne Spooner, Ciaran Reinhardt, Fiona BolandFiona Boland, Samuel McConkeySamuel McConkey, Teresa PawlikowskaTeresa Pawlikowska

There are differing views on how learners' feedback-seeking behaviours (FSB) develop during training. With globalisation has come medical student migration and programme internationalisation. Western-derived educational practices may prove challenging for diverse learner populations. Exploring undergraduate activity using a model of FSB may give insight into how FSB evolves and the influence of situational factors, such as nationality and site of study. Our findings seek to inform medical school processes that support feedback literacy. Using a mixed methods approach, we collected questionnaire and interview data from final-year medical students in Ireland, Bahrain, and Malaysia. A validated questionnaire investigated relationships with FSB and goal orientation, leadership style preference, and perceived costs and benefits. Interviews with the same student population explored their FSB experiences in clinical practice, qualitatively, enriching this data. The data were integrated using the 'following the thread' technique. Three hundred and twenty-five of a total of 514 completed questionnaires and 57 interviews were analysed. Learning goal orientation (LGO), instrumental leadership and supportive leadership related positively to perceived feedback benefits (0.23, 0.2, and 0.31, respectively, p < 0.05). Perceived feedback benefits are related positively to feedback monitoring and inquiry (0.13 and 0.38, respectively, p < 0.05). The personal cost of feedback is unsupported in quantitative data, but was a strong theme in interviews, as was feedback avoidance, peer feedback, and unsupportive learning environment. No differences were observed across sub-groups based on gender, study site, or student nationality. Integrated analysis describes FSB: avoiding 'unsafe' feedback (first, do no harm) and overcoming barriers (beat the system) and goal-centred curation (shop around) to optimise benefits. Diverse medical students across three continents undertake FSB with careful navigation, as a valued but risky business, that is highly contextualised. Promoting a constructive FSB is complex. Overcoming outdated theory and practices on the wards remains a challenge to psychologically safe, learner-centred feedback. 

History

Data Availability Statement

The datasets analysed in the study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.tandfonline.com/

Published Citation

Spooner M, Reinhardt C, Boland F, McConkey S, Pawlikowska T. Risky business: medical students' feedback-seeking behaviours: a mixed methods study. Med Educ Online. 2024;29(1):2330259.

Publication Date

26 March 2024

PubMed ID

38529848

Department/Unit

  • Data Science Centre
  • Health Professions Education Centre
  • International Health and Tropical Medicine
  • Medicine
  • School of Population Health

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)