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Stakeholder views of rural community‐based medical education: a narrative review of the international literature
Author(s) -
Somporn Praphun,
Ash Julie,
Walters Lucie
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1111/medu.13580
Subject(s) - stakeholder , context (archaeology) , workforce , medical education , government (linguistics) , rural health , rural area , public relations , medicine , sociology , nursing , political science , paleontology , linguistics , philosophy , pathology , law , biology
Context Rural community‐based medical education ( RCBME ), in which medical student learning activities take place within a rural community, requires students, clinical teachers, patients, community members and representatives of health and government sectors to actively contribute to the educational process. Therefore, academics seeking to develop RCBME need to understand the rural context, and the views and needs of local stakeholders. Objectives The aim of this review is to examine stakeholder experiences of RCBME programmes internationally. Methods This narrative literature review of original research articles published after 1970 utilises Worley's symbiosis model of medical education as an analysis framework. This model proposes that students experience RCBME through their intersection with multiple clinical, social and institutional relationships. This model seeks to provide a framework for considering the intersecting relationships in which RCBME programmes are situated. Results Thirty RCBME programmes are described in 52 articles, representing a wide range of rural clinical placements. One‐year longitudinal integrated clerkships for penultimate‐year students in Anglosphere countries were most common. Such RCBME enables students to engage in work‐integrated learning in a feasible manner that is acceptable to many rural clinicians and patients. Academic results are not compromised, and a few papers demonstrate quality improvement for rural health services engaged in RCBME . These programmes have delivered some rural medical workforce outcomes to communities and governments. Medical students also provide social capital to rural communities. However, these programmes have significant financial cost and risk student social and educational isolation. Conclusions Rural community‐based medical education programmes are seen as academically acceptable and can facilitate symbiotic relationships among students, rural clinicians, patients and community stakeholders. These relationships can influence students’ clinical competency and professional identity, increase graduates’ interest in rural careers, and potentially improve rural health service stability. Formal prospective stakeholder consultations should be published in the literature.