BMJ Open (Mar 2023)

Evidence-guided approach to portfolio-guided teaching and assessing communications, ethics and professionalism for medical students and physicians: a systematic scoping review

  • Stephen Mason,
  • Yun Ting Ong,
  • Kuang Teck Tay,
  • Gillian Li Gek Phua,
  • Limin Wijaya,
  • Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna,
  • Chrystie Wan Ning Quek,
  • Min Chiam,
  • Jacquelin Jia Qi Ting,
  • Daniel Zhihao Hong,
  • Bertrand Kai Yang Lam,
  • Annabelle Jia Sing Lim,
  • Eleanor Jia Xin Chong,
  • Anushka Pisupati,
  • Rei Tan,
  • Jocelyn Yi Huang Yeo,
  • Yi Zhe Koh,
  • Jia Yin Lim,
  • Jamie Xuelian Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-067048
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3

Abstract

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Objectives Guiding the development of longitudinal competencies in communication, ethics and professionalism underlines the role of portfolios to capture and evaluate the multiple multisource appraisals and direct personalised support to clinicians. However, a common approach to these combined portfolios continues to elude medical practice. A systematic scoping review is proposed to map portfolio use in training and assessments of ethics, communication and professionalism competencies particularly in its inculcation of new values, beliefs and principles changes attitudes, thinking and practice while nurturing professional identity formation. It is posited that effective structuring of portfolios can promote self-directed learning, personalised assessment and appropriate support of professional identity formation.Design Krishna’s Systematic Evidence-Based Approach (SEBA) is employed to guide this systematic scoping review of portfolio use in communication, ethics and professionalism training and assessment.Data sources PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, ERIC, Scopus and Google Scholar databases.Eligibility criteria Articles published between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2020 were included.Data extraction and synthesis The included articles are concurrently content and thematically analysed using the split approach. Overlapping categories and themes identified are combined using the jigsaw perspective. The themes/categories are compared with the summaries of the included articles in the funnelling process to ensure their accuracy. The domains identified form the framework for the discussion.Results 12 300 abstracts were reviewed, 946 full-text articles were evaluated and 82 articles were analysed, and the four domains identified were indications, content, design, and strengths and limitations.Conclusions This review reveals that when using a consistent framework, accepted endpoints and outcome measures, longitudinal multisource, multimodal assessment data fashions professional and personal development and enhances identity construction. Future studies into effective assessment tools and support mechanisms are required if portfolio use is to be maximised.