Describing learning experiences of undergraduate medical students in rural settings.

E A Zinser, H T Wiegert
Author Information

Abstract

This article describes a method for evaluating clinical experiences gained by undergraduate medical students at the University of Washington who take a family medicine clerkship at one of five rural communities. The student's clinical, community and practice management activities are documented on a standardized daily log. This log permits efficient transcription to punch cards. Data analysis results in a list of diagnoses, procedures, and community and practice management activities. These experiences are presented in order of frequency with a distribution of experiences by level of student responsibility, by location or agency, and by follow-up versus first contact. The results presented here constitute a summary profile over three academic quarters. The data reveal a substantial student exposure to medical problems common in family practice. Students assume a relatively high level of responsibility and experience continuity in patient care. This paper describes various ways in which these results are used.

MeSH Term

Education, Medical, Undergraduate
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Family Practice
Humans
Learning
Rural Health

Word Cloud

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