Medical students' assessments of skill development in rural primary care clinics.

INTRODUCTION This study assessed the impact of a rural primary care preceptorship on medical students' self-perceived ability to provide acute, chronic, and preventive care, to perform procedures, to communicate with patients, and to understand the community and healthcare system. METHODS Students were surveyed about their self-assessed skills on 11 major components (97 items) immediately before and after a 16 week preceptorship in a rural primary care clinic. Responses were analyzed for 96 medical students using a paired comparisons t-test and univariate statistics. RESULTS Students' skills significantly increased on all components and items. The skills most highly assessed post-preceptorship were those skills related to the management of chronic problems, the provision of patient education and health maintenance, and the ability to handle undifferentiated and acute problems. Among the 11 components assessed, students ranked their skills in performing procedures the lowest. The largest cumulative gain in skills was in the areas of understanding health systems and the community. CONCLUSIONS This study provides a unique opportunity to look at skill development before and after a rural clerkship. From the student's perspective, the 16 week preceptorship appears to be of significant educational benefit. Future studies need to examine other measures of performance and outcomes of training in rural primary care settings.

[1]  B. Levy,et al.  Factors associated with higher clinical skills experience of medical students on a family medicine preceptorship. , 2005, Family medicine.

[2]  D. Prideaux,et al.  What do medical students actually do on clinical rotations? , 2004, Medical teacher.

[3]  S. Liaw,et al.  Developing a conceptual understanding of rural health practice. , 2004, The Australian journal of rural health.

[4]  D. Prideaux,et al.  Cohort study of examination performance of undergraduate medical students learning in community settings , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[5]  D. Schaad,et al.  Student Providers Aspiring to Rural and Underserved Experiences at the University of Washington: Promoting Team Practice among the Health Care Professions , 2003, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[6]  Russell E. Mardon,et al.  The rural physician workforce in Florida: a survey of US- and foreign-born primary care physicians. , 2003, The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association.

[7]  Elizabeth G Baxley,et al.  Rural-urban differences in visits to primary care physicians. , 2002, Family medicine.

[8]  S. Yang,et al.  Challenges to rural medical education: a student perspective. , 2002, The Australian journal of rural health.

[9]  W. Markesbery,et al.  Urban‐Rural Differences in a Memory Disorders Clinical Population , 2001, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[10]  S. Bogdewic,et al.  Gender and Preceptors' Feedback to Students , 2000, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[11]  M. Glasser,et al.  Screening applicants for a rural medical education program. , 2000, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[12]  J. Diamond,et al.  A program to increase the number of family physicians in rural and underserved areas: impact after 22 years. , 1999, JAMA.

[13]  S. Bogdewic,et al.  Tracking the contribution of a family medicine clerkship to the clinical curriculum. , 1998, Family medicine.

[14]  J. Penrod,et al.  Family practice residency programs and the graduation of rural family physicians. , 1998, Family medicine.

[15]  D. Brandau,et al.  Effect of clerkship training at rural sites on students' clinical skills , 1994, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[16]  D. Kassebaum,et al.  Rural sources of medical students, and graduates' choice of rural practice , 1993, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[17]  D. Dewitt,et al.  The reported value of rural internal medicine residency electives and factors that influence rural career choice. , 2002, The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association.

[18]  M. Glasser,et al.  Illinois RMED: a comprehensive program to improve the supply of rural family physicians. , 2000, Family medicine.