The benefits of longitudinal relationships with patients for developing health professionals: the longitudinal student-patient relationship

Date

2014

Authors

Hudson, J.N.
Weston, K.

Editors

Higgs, J.
Croker, A.
Tasker, D.
Hummell, J.
Patton, N.

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Book chapter

Citation

Health Practice Relationships, 2014 / Higgs, J., Croker, A., Tasker, D., Hummell, J., Patton, N. (ed./s), vol.9, Ch.25, pp.211-218

Statement of Responsibility

Judith Nicky Hudson and Kathryn M. Weston

Conference Name

Abstract

Clinical placements are widely acknowledged as essential to the holistic development of health professionals, with the ability to engage in professional practise in patient-centred healthcare models providing one example of this holistic development. These placement experiences have historically involved a series of short-term rotations between hospital-based disciplines, continuous with or interspersed between short blocks of theoretical learning. While the studentclinician (preceptor) relationship is central to student learning outcomes, these short-term placements often offer students little opportunity for developing relationships with patients, or for continuity of care experiences. Investigation of an alternative clinical education model for medical students, the longitudinal integrated community-based clerkship, has revealed that patients are important participants in the patient-student-preceptor triad that develops. In this chapter we present patient, student and preceptor narratives to illustrate how longitudinal relationships between students and patients can play a significant role in the student journey to “becoming” a patient-centred health professional.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2014 Sense Publishers. All rights reserved.

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record