A qualitative study of final-year medical students' perspectives of general practitioners' competencies

  • Landström B
  • Mattsson B
  • Rudebeck C
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Abstract

Objectives: To investigate final-year medical students' perspectives of general practitioners' competencies. A further aim of the study was to investigate which type of clinical problems is properly managed by GPs according to students. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study of 49 final year medical students from two programmes. Reflective writing statements were used to collect data. Qualitative content analysis was employed to analyse data. Results: Three themes were identified to explain the conditions of a general practitioner (GP). They are: 'prerequi-sites', 'patients´problemspatients´problems' and 'competence and clinical judgment' which reflect the specific features of primary care, presentation of symptoms by patient and the way that GPs approach an actual encounter. Conclusions: The students valued the importance of unselected patient problems, straightforwardness in contact and care as the characteristics of a competent GP. They viewed patients with different approaches and related their observations to problems of fragmentation within this large area of medical care. This is a period in the training of students in which students' views of general practice are formed.

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Landström, B., Mattsson, B., & Rudebeck, C. E. (2011). A qualitative study of final-year medical students’ perspectives of general practitioners’ competencies. International Journal of Medical Education, 2, 102–109. https://doi.org/10.5116/ijme.4e79.b49a

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