David Prideaux - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by David Prideaux

Research paper thumbnail of Integrated learning

Oxford Textbook of Medical Education, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Social network analysis in medical education: a methodology in search of a theory

Research paper thumbnail of In our Christmas stockings

Research paper thumbnail of The South Australian Prohibition of Discrimination Act and racism

Research paper thumbnail of Vocational career paths of graduate entry medical students at Flinders University : a comparison of rural, remote and tertiary tracks

The Medical Journal of Australia, Mar 1, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Do consultations in rural general practice take more time when practitioners are precepting medical students?: Student effect on consultation times

Med Educ, 2007

a subset of students on the 4-year, graduate-entry medical course chooses to spend Year 3 based i... more a subset of students on the 4-year, graduate-entry medical course chooses to spend Year 3 based in rural general practice as part of the Parallel Rural Community Curriculum (PRCC). This programme is equivalent to the tertiary teaching hospital option in terms of student educational outcomes. However, there is concern that this success comes at the cost of lost consulting time for the general practitioners (GPs) who supervise these students. OBJECTIVE This study aimed to quantify the impact of medical students on the consulting time of rural GP supervisors. METHODS We carried out a prospective cohort study using analysis of videotape recordings. Study subjects were GPs supervising PRCC medical students and working from their own consulting rooms in the clinic setting. Main outcome measures were mean consultation times in sessions with and without medical students. RESULTS Using mixed model analysis accounting for clustering of consultations within doctors, and controlling for confounding factors, the estimated marginal mean of regular consultation time was 13 minutes, 27 seconds, which was not significantly shorter than that of precepting consultations (12 minutes, 48 seconds) or parallel consultations (12 minutes, 24 seconds). CONCLUSIONS Consultation length does not increase when rural GPs supervise medical students using a parallel consulting model.

Research paper thumbnail of Northerners and Southerners: Two Approaches to Defining Core Content in Medical Education

Research paper thumbnail of The emperor's new clothes : from objectives to outcomes

Medical Education, Mar 1, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of Researching the outcomes of educational interventions: a matter of design : RCTs have important limitations in evaluating educational interventions

Bmj British Medical Journal, Jan 19, 2002

... Editorial. Researching the outcomes of educational interventions: a matter of design. RCTs ha... more ... Editorial. Researching the outcomes of educational interventions: a matter of design. RCTs have important limitations in evaluating educational interventions. ... 6 7 They focused on the potential effects of research design on the findings of reviews. ...

Research paper thumbnail of The emperor's new wardrobe: the whole and the sum of the parts in curriculum design

Research paper thumbnail of Clinical participation of medical students in three contemporary training models

Medical Education, 2015

As community settings are being used increasingly in undergraduate medical programmes, this study... more As community settings are being used increasingly in undergraduate medical programmes, this study aimed to explore and compare the clinical experiences of students in hospital-based and community-based training programmes. It measured students' clinical participation and compared the perspectives of Year 3 medical students in three different models of clinical education: a tertiary hospital block programme; a community hybrid programme, and a rural longitudinal integrated clerkship (LIC) programme. The study used a mixed methodology approach to examine the clinical experiences of students through the analysis of logbooks and semi-structured student interviews. This involved the quantitative analysis of 88 logbook weeks, data from which were triangulated through the analysis of 101 individual interviews using grounded theory. A total of 35 students across the three different clinical training models participated in the study. The results demonstrate significant differences among the three models in students' clinical participation and suggest that community settings provide more opportunities to students for meaningful engagement in patient care activities. Consistent wider and more direct access to patients for students, as found in the community-based model, provides a pathway for engaging students in the learning processes, and a step towards making them aware of their learning needs and knowledge. Interviews provide evidence that authentic clinical activities can be enhanced through structured systems of supervision and through the provision of authentic roles for students in clinical teams.

Research paper thumbnail of The primary health professional education : current models and barriers to participation

Research paper thumbnail of Optimising the impact of education for community pharmacy in Australia

Gp Phc 2006 Optimising Impact 2006 General Practice and Primary Health Care Research Conference Abstracts, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Planning Frameworks and Staff Participation: Changing to a Graduate Entry, Problem-Based Medical Course

Research paper thumbnail of International Best Practices for Evaluation in the Health Professions

Assessment for selection in medicine and the health professions should follow the same quality as... more Assessment for selection in medicine and the health professions should follow the same quality assurance processes as in-course assessment. The literature on selection is limited and is not strongly theoretical or conceptual. For written testing, there is evidence of the predictive validity of Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) for medical school and licensing examination performance. There is also evidence for the predictive validity of grade point average, particularly in combination with MCAT for graduate entry but little evidence about the predictive validity of school leaver scores. Interviews have not been shown to be robust selection measures. Studies of multiple mini-interviews have indicated good predictive validity and reliability. Of other measures used in selection, only the growing interest in personality testing appears to warrant future work. Widening access to medical and health professional programmes is an increasing priority and relates to the social accountability mandate of medical and health professional schools. While traditional selection measures do discriminate against various population groups, there is little evidence on the effect of non-traditional measures in widening access. Preparation and outreach programmes show most promise. In summary, the areas of consensus for assessment for selection are small in number. Recommendations for future action focus on the adoption of principles of good assessment and curriculum alignment, use of multi-method programmatic approaches, development of interdisciplinary frameworks and utilisation of sophisticated measurement models. The social accountability mandate of medical and health professional schools demands that social inclusion, workforce issues and widening of access are embedded in the principles of good assessment for selection.

Research paper thumbnail of Predicting medical students' rural practice intentions using data from the Medical Schools' Outcome Database

Assess the feasibility of developing a predictive model for medical students' intention to take u... more Assess the feasibility of developing a predictive model for medical students' intention to take up rural practice after graduation based on characteristics of the individual and their circumstances on entry to the program.

Research paper thumbnail of Action Research and Curriculum Change in a Medical School: false starts and familiar constraints

Educational Action Research, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of Citizenship Education as Ideology Transmission

Curriculum Perspectives, 1984

Research paper thumbnail of From medical school to medical practice: a national tracking system to underpin planning for a sustainable medical workforce in Australasia

Research paper thumbnail of Are medical students influenced by preceptos in making career choices, and if so how? A systematic review

Rural and remote health

Increasingly medical students undertake clinical training in distributed learning environments. T... more Increasingly medical students undertake clinical training in distributed learning environments. The driving factor for this is predominantly to address medical workforce shortages. In these environments students are often taught by private practitioners, residents, house staff and registrars, as well as faculty. Through a mix of short- and long-term preceptorships, clerkships and rotations, medical students are exposed to a wider range of preceptors, mentors and role models than has traditionally been the case. The aim of this systematic review was to understand if and how medical students' career choices are influenced by their interactions with preceptors. A search of Ovid Medline, Scopus, ISI Web of Science, PubMed, Eric and CIHNAL was undertaken. The search was structured around the key terms: Medical Student, Career Choice and Preceptor, and variants of these terms. Search limits were set to English-language publications between 1995 and 2010. A total of 36 articles met the...

Research paper thumbnail of Integrated learning

Oxford Textbook of Medical Education, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Social network analysis in medical education: a methodology in search of a theory

Research paper thumbnail of In our Christmas stockings

Research paper thumbnail of The South Australian Prohibition of Discrimination Act and racism

Research paper thumbnail of Vocational career paths of graduate entry medical students at Flinders University : a comparison of rural, remote and tertiary tracks

The Medical Journal of Australia, Mar 1, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Do consultations in rural general practice take more time when practitioners are precepting medical students?: Student effect on consultation times

Med Educ, 2007

a subset of students on the 4-year, graduate-entry medical course chooses to spend Year 3 based i... more a subset of students on the 4-year, graduate-entry medical course chooses to spend Year 3 based in rural general practice as part of the Parallel Rural Community Curriculum (PRCC). This programme is equivalent to the tertiary teaching hospital option in terms of student educational outcomes. However, there is concern that this success comes at the cost of lost consulting time for the general practitioners (GPs) who supervise these students. OBJECTIVE This study aimed to quantify the impact of medical students on the consulting time of rural GP supervisors. METHODS We carried out a prospective cohort study using analysis of videotape recordings. Study subjects were GPs supervising PRCC medical students and working from their own consulting rooms in the clinic setting. Main outcome measures were mean consultation times in sessions with and without medical students. RESULTS Using mixed model analysis accounting for clustering of consultations within doctors, and controlling for confounding factors, the estimated marginal mean of regular consultation time was 13 minutes, 27 seconds, which was not significantly shorter than that of precepting consultations (12 minutes, 48 seconds) or parallel consultations (12 minutes, 24 seconds). CONCLUSIONS Consultation length does not increase when rural GPs supervise medical students using a parallel consulting model.

Research paper thumbnail of Northerners and Southerners: Two Approaches to Defining Core Content in Medical Education

Research paper thumbnail of The emperor's new clothes : from objectives to outcomes

Medical Education, Mar 1, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of Researching the outcomes of educational interventions: a matter of design : RCTs have important limitations in evaluating educational interventions

Bmj British Medical Journal, Jan 19, 2002

... Editorial. Researching the outcomes of educational interventions: a matter of design. RCTs ha... more ... Editorial. Researching the outcomes of educational interventions: a matter of design. RCTs have important limitations in evaluating educational interventions. ... 6 7 They focused on the potential effects of research design on the findings of reviews. ...

Research paper thumbnail of The emperor's new wardrobe: the whole and the sum of the parts in curriculum design

Research paper thumbnail of Clinical participation of medical students in three contemporary training models

Medical Education, 2015

As community settings are being used increasingly in undergraduate medical programmes, this study... more As community settings are being used increasingly in undergraduate medical programmes, this study aimed to explore and compare the clinical experiences of students in hospital-based and community-based training programmes. It measured students' clinical participation and compared the perspectives of Year 3 medical students in three different models of clinical education: a tertiary hospital block programme; a community hybrid programme, and a rural longitudinal integrated clerkship (LIC) programme. The study used a mixed methodology approach to examine the clinical experiences of students through the analysis of logbooks and semi-structured student interviews. This involved the quantitative analysis of 88 logbook weeks, data from which were triangulated through the analysis of 101 individual interviews using grounded theory. A total of 35 students across the three different clinical training models participated in the study. The results demonstrate significant differences among the three models in students' clinical participation and suggest that community settings provide more opportunities to students for meaningful engagement in patient care activities. Consistent wider and more direct access to patients for students, as found in the community-based model, provides a pathway for engaging students in the learning processes, and a step towards making them aware of their learning needs and knowledge. Interviews provide evidence that authentic clinical activities can be enhanced through structured systems of supervision and through the provision of authentic roles for students in clinical teams.

Research paper thumbnail of The primary health professional education : current models and barriers to participation

Research paper thumbnail of Optimising the impact of education for community pharmacy in Australia

Gp Phc 2006 Optimising Impact 2006 General Practice and Primary Health Care Research Conference Abstracts, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Planning Frameworks and Staff Participation: Changing to a Graduate Entry, Problem-Based Medical Course

Research paper thumbnail of International Best Practices for Evaluation in the Health Professions

Assessment for selection in medicine and the health professions should follow the same quality as... more Assessment for selection in medicine and the health professions should follow the same quality assurance processes as in-course assessment. The literature on selection is limited and is not strongly theoretical or conceptual. For written testing, there is evidence of the predictive validity of Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) for medical school and licensing examination performance. There is also evidence for the predictive validity of grade point average, particularly in combination with MCAT for graduate entry but little evidence about the predictive validity of school leaver scores. Interviews have not been shown to be robust selection measures. Studies of multiple mini-interviews have indicated good predictive validity and reliability. Of other measures used in selection, only the growing interest in personality testing appears to warrant future work. Widening access to medical and health professional programmes is an increasing priority and relates to the social accountability mandate of medical and health professional schools. While traditional selection measures do discriminate against various population groups, there is little evidence on the effect of non-traditional measures in widening access. Preparation and outreach programmes show most promise. In summary, the areas of consensus for assessment for selection are small in number. Recommendations for future action focus on the adoption of principles of good assessment and curriculum alignment, use of multi-method programmatic approaches, development of interdisciplinary frameworks and utilisation of sophisticated measurement models. The social accountability mandate of medical and health professional schools demands that social inclusion, workforce issues and widening of access are embedded in the principles of good assessment for selection.

Research paper thumbnail of Predicting medical students' rural practice intentions using data from the Medical Schools' Outcome Database

Assess the feasibility of developing a predictive model for medical students' intention to take u... more Assess the feasibility of developing a predictive model for medical students' intention to take up rural practice after graduation based on characteristics of the individual and their circumstances on entry to the program.

Research paper thumbnail of Action Research and Curriculum Change in a Medical School: false starts and familiar constraints

Educational Action Research, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of Citizenship Education as Ideology Transmission

Curriculum Perspectives, 1984

Research paper thumbnail of From medical school to medical practice: a national tracking system to underpin planning for a sustainable medical workforce in Australasia

Research paper thumbnail of Are medical students influenced by preceptos in making career choices, and if so how? A systematic review

Rural and remote health

Increasingly medical students undertake clinical training in distributed learning environments. T... more Increasingly medical students undertake clinical training in distributed learning environments. The driving factor for this is predominantly to address medical workforce shortages. In these environments students are often taught by private practitioners, residents, house staff and registrars, as well as faculty. Through a mix of short- and long-term preceptorships, clerkships and rotations, medical students are exposed to a wider range of preceptors, mentors and role models than has traditionally been the case. The aim of this systematic review was to understand if and how medical students' career choices are influenced by their interactions with preceptors. A search of Ovid Medline, Scopus, ISI Web of Science, PubMed, Eric and CIHNAL was undertaken. The search was structured around the key terms: Medical Student, Career Choice and Preceptor, and variants of these terms. Search limits were set to English-language publications between 1995 and 2010. A total of 36 articles met the...