GMS Journal for Medical Education (Sep 2024)

Professional development of medical students – piloting a longitudinal curriculum at Jena University Hospital (LongProf)

  • Schmidt, Konrad,
  • Siller, Katharina,
  • Rißmann, Jens,
  • Andlauer, Marie,
  • Feustel, Jana,
  • Klein, Friederike,
  • Petruschke, Inga,
  • Schulz, Sven

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3205/zma001699
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41, no. 4
p. Doc44

Abstract

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Background: Professionalism is an important prerequisite for the quality of medical care with specific competencies anchored in the National Competence-Based Learning Objectives Catalogue Medicine 2.0. To date, there are hardly any explicit teaching formats at German universities to achieve these. A longitudinal curriculum for the development of medical professionalism (LongProf) has now been developed, implemented and evaluated at Jena University Hospital.Methods: The target group of the four-semester-curriculum were medical students from the fifth semester onwards. After a nine-month conception phase, a total of nine courses (6 teaching units each) took place from the winter semester 2021/22. Students also had the opportunity to interact with experienced doctors in mentoring sessions. The courses were evaluated by the participating students (n=23) in terms of acceptance and individually perceived professional development through quantitative surveys and qualitative focus group interviews.Results: The qualitative and quantitative evaluation revealed mostly positive feedback (mean >7/9). Students stated that the courses had provided them with lasting support in developing their own medical professionalism and in coping with the demands of their studies. The personal and long-term relationship building between students and teachers was considered particularly helpful.Discussion and conclusion: A multi-semester curriculum opens up ways for implementing the development of medical professionalism in medical studies. A trusting relationship between students and teachers, made possible by the longitudinal structure, is seen as conducive to the development of an individual medical identity. The curriculum is a useful complement to regular medical studies.

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