Title of article :
Specialty Showcase Days: Can Specialist Careers Workshops Improve The Consideration Of ENT For Medical Students ?
Author/Authors :
Arwyn-Jones, James Otolaryngology Department - Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - The Bays - London W2 1NY, UK , Bhalla, Sanjana Otolaryngology Department - Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - The Bays - London W2 1NY, UK , Acharya, Vikas Otolaryngology Department - Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - The Bays - London W2 1NY, UK , Awad, Zaid Otolaryngology Department - Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - The Bays - London W2 1NY, UK , Tolley, Neil Otolaryngology Department - Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - The Bays - London W2 1NY, UK , Beegun, Issa Otolaryngology Department - Barts Health NHS Trust - Trust Headquarters - The Royal London Hospital - London- E1 2ES, UK
Abstract :
We hypothesize that poor consideration of specialist surgery is due to a lack of exposure to information about careers and practice itself. Ear, Nose, and Throat (ENT) surgery is given little weight in medical school curricula, despite ENT problems being extremely common. Our objective is to assess whether a specialty showcase day was sufficient to boost informed consideration of this career.
Design
We designed a half-day course involving an interactive careers workshop exploring ENT as a specialty choice, alongside simulation stations of commonly presenting ENT problems led by ENT doctors. We used pre- and post-course evaluation sheets to explore factors that encourage and discourage students from surgical careers and perceptions of ENT.
Setting
A large proportion of UK medical schools do not offer ENT placements, and of those that do, nearly half are not compulsory. This leaves students unaware of ENT as a career option and unclear about what an ENT career comprises. Our half-day course took place in the simulation suite at St Mary’s Hospital, London.
Participants
Medical students were mainly in their third year of study and had aspirations towards a variety of surgical and non-surgical careers, with a minority aspiring towards ENT before the course.
Results
Our results demonstrate that all students found the session useful and had a much better understanding of ENT practice, with almost all students leaving more likely to consider a career in ENT.
Conclusion
We would like to repeat this session in different student year groups and compare their perceptions with our results. We find our results a good case for including informative careers workshops as part of medical school teaching. We pose that interactive workshops exploring specialist surgical careers are a valid way to enable students in making informed career decisions – particularly in specialties that are under-represented at medical school.
Keywords :
simulation , otorhinolaryngology , specialist surgery , careers , undergraduate education
Journal title :
Advances in Medical Education and Practice