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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29877
Title: Feeling the Pulse: An Exploration of the Emotional Effects of Competency-Based Medical Education in Psychiatry
Authors: Sinha, Sakshi
Advisor: Acai, Anita
Department: Health Science Education
Keywords: competency-based medical education;competence by design;emotional impact;postgraduate medical education;health professions education;psychiatry residency
Publication Date: 2024
Abstract: Introduction: Competency-based medical education (CBME) is a learner-centered outcomes-based approach. Competence by Design (CBD) is a hybrid time-based and outcomes-based CBME model that was adopted by all Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada-based residency training programs, with the primary objective of enhancing postgraduate medical education quality. However, preliminary findings suggest that residents experience higher levels of stress, anxiety, and exhaustion in CBD than with previous curricula. This thesis aims to identify and understand the emotional effects of CBME on residents, faculty, and administrative staff. Methods: This study used a qualitative approach, specifically hermeneutic phenomenology. Seven residents, six faculty members (several with education leadership roles), and one administrative staff member from a postgraduate Psychiatry program were recruited. Participants underwent semi-structured, one-on-one interviews where they were probed on their emotions with CBME. Interviews were transcribed and analyzed using a line-by-line approach that generated individual meaning units and, subsequently, themes. Results: Five themes were identified: 1) Education is an emotional experience; 2) The emotional toll of CBD; 3) CBD is a failed educational promise—Expectations vs. realities; 4) Structural and administrative burdens of CBD; and 5) Survival of educational demands—The quest for coping. Participants initially struggled to articulate their emotions, but expressed surprise at realizing they did have strong, often negative, emotions related to CBD. There was also a dissonance identified between the anticipated benefits and the execution of CBD. Furthermore, participants highlighted administrative and structural challenges of CBD, specifically regarding Entrustable Professional Activities, which were a burden and lacked much educational value. Participants discussed using various coping strategies to manage CBD’s demands. Conclusion: The findings of this work suggest that CBD has a negative emotional impact on residents and faculty, specifically due to tension between CBD’s theoretical benefits and its practical challenges, including increased emotional burden and structural challenges.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29877
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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