Reflective Writing as a Window on Medical Students' Professional Identity Development in a Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship.

This study explores how patient interactions and intentional curriculum design support professional identity construction in students participating in a longitudinal integrated clerkship focused on care for the underserved. Approach: This qualitative analysis investigated students' professional identity construction as detailed in 45 reflective essays from 15 students while enrolled in an 11-month longitudinal integrated clerkship (LIC) in a safety-net hospital system. Researchers used an inductive analytic approach. Findings: Students provided rich and complex descriptions of their experiences. Six themes emerged: care for the underserved; therapeutic alliance; humility and gratitude; altruism; resilience; and aspirations. Insights: Professional identity construction was observable through students' reflective essays. Student interactions with patients provided rich material for professional identity construction, and role models in patient care enhanced this process. This study suggests that clinical learning in a safety-net hospital system, coupled with an LIC curriculum that prioritizes continuity with vulnerable patients, faculty role models, and ongoing reflection, supported the professional identity construction of students as patient-centered caregivers providing equitable care and advocacy for the underserved, described here as an Equity Identity. PMID: 31729253 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Teaching and Learning in Medicine - Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: Tags: Teach Learn Med Source Type: research