Developing a teaching research culture for general practice
Loading...
Date
Authors
Kljakovic, Marjan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BioMed Central
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To ascertain the issues all general practice educators need to understand when educating GP registrars to learn about research. STUDY DESIGN: A review of MEDLINE [1996–2007], six websites and key informants produced 302 publications, which reduced to 35 articles, 7 books, and 9 policy documents.
Results: Key themes that emerged from a thematic analysis of the literature that GP educators need to consider when teaching registrars about research were [i] the need to understand that
learning research is influenced by attitudes; [ii] the need to address organisational constraints on learning research; [iii] the need to identify the educational barriers on learning research; [iv] the need to understand there are gaps in GP research content – especially from GP registrars; And [v] the need to understand the value of research on the GP registrar's educational cycle of learning, which develops in a culture that allows research to flourish. CONCLUSION: Australian GP registrars will observe a research culture only if they encounter clinician-researchers paid to practice and conduct research in their general practice.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Asia Pacific Family Medicine 8.6 (2009)
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description
BioMed Central Copyright Licence Agreement