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    What are we teaching UK medical students about ageing? Results of the third BGS national curriculum survey

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    Author
    Masud, Tahir
    Blundell, Adrian
    Gordon, Adam L.
    Keyword
    Aged
    Ageing
    Medical education
    Medical schools
    Medical students
    Date
    2024
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher's URL
    https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afae139.065
    Abstract
    Introduction: The ageing population means all doctors, regardless of specialty, will need knowledge, skills, and attitudes to care for older people with complex health conditions. An essential component of preparing the medical workforce to best care for older people is by including teaching on ageing and geriatric medicine in undergraduate medical curricula. Here we present results of the British Geriatrics Society (BGS) national curriculum survey 2021-22, highlighting progress made in undergraduate teaching in geriatric medicine. Method(s): All 35 UK GMC-registered medical schools at the time of data collection were invited to participate in an online survey on content, methodology, timing, and duration of teaching in ageing and geriatric medicine. The survey was structured around the 2013 BGS recommended undergraduate curriculum, for consistency with previous surveys. Result(s): 30/35 of UK medical schools responded (83% response rate). Most teaching occurred in the fourth year of study (21/30, 70%).The majority (15/30, 50%) reported a discrete module for geriatric medicine lasting 4-8 weeks, an increase on previous surveys. However, several programmes have reduced the amount of in-person teaching since the COVID-19 pandemic. Notably, three schools reported geriatric medicine exposure lasting >12 weeks.Of these, two were integrated clerkships and one a dedicated geriatric medicine module. There is increasing focus on multidisciplinary education, with emphasis on combining virtual or simulated teaching with other healthcare professions (n = 7). Every school (n = 30) taught at least one topic as small-group or case-based learning. Conclusion(s): There is a trend towards increasing exposure to geriatric medicine compared to previous surveys in 2008 and 2013. However, several of the programmes reporting greater exposure incorporate geriatric medicine in an integrated clerkship rather than as a dedicated module. Programmes demonstrated a move from didactic teaching towards small-group and case-based learning, employing a wider variety of assessment methods than previous.
    Citation
    Watson, A., Pearson, G.M.E., Fisher, G., Redgrave, M., Khoshnaghsh, A., Winter, R., Masud, T., Blundell, A., Gordon, A.L. and Henderson, E.J. (2024) 'What are we teaching UK medical students about ageing? Results of the third BGS national curriculum survey', Age and Ageing, 53(Supplement 3), afae139.065. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afae139.065 https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afae139.065.
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/19449
    Note
    Available to read at the publisher's website here: https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afae139.065.
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    Healthcare of Older People

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