WE-R NHS (Workforce and Education Research NHS)

New graduate doctors’ preparedness for practice: a multistakeholder, multicentre narrative study

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Extract from Abstract:

Abstract
Objective While previous studies have begun to explore newly graduated junior doctors’ preparedness for practice, findings are largely based on simplistic survey data or perceptions of newly graduated junior doctors and their clinical supervisors alone. This study explores, in a deeper manner, multiple stakeholders’ conceptualisations of what it means to be prepared for practice and their perceptions about newly graduated junior doctors’ preparedness (or unpreparedness) using innovative qualitative methods.

Results
We identified 2186 narratives across all participants (506 classified as ‘prepared’, 663 as ‘unprepared’, 951 as ‘general’). Seven themes were identified; this paper focuses on two themes pertinent to our research questions: (1) explicit conceptualisations of preparedness for practice; and (2) newly graduated junior doctors’ preparedness for the General Medical Council’s (GMC) outcomes for graduates......

Conclusion
Our narrative findings highlight the complexities and nuances surrounding new medical graduates’ preparedness for practice. We encourage stakeholders to develop a shared understanding (and realistic expectations) of new medical graduates’ preparedness. We invite medical school leaders to increase the proportion of time that medical students spend participating meaningfully in multiprofessional teams during workplace learning.

This article is open access and available to download.

Additional information

Published: July, 2018.

Resource details

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Contributed by: WE-R NHS (Workforce and Education Research NHS)
Authored by: Charlotte Rees
Karen Mattick
Camille Emilie Roberts
Narcie Kelly
Kathrin Kaufhold
Gerard Gormley
Alison Bullock
Lynn V Monrouxe
Licence: More information on licences
Last updated: 30 April 2024
First contributed: 28 July 2023
Audience access level: General user

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