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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effective supervision in clinical practice settings: a literature review

Sue Kilminster, +1 more
- 05 Oct 2000 - 
- Vol. 34, Iss: 10, pp 827-840
TLDR
This large‐scale, interdisciplinary review of literature addressing supervision is the first from a medical education perspective to focus on clinical supervision in postgraduate and undergraduate medical education.
Abstract
Context Clinical supervision has a vital role in postgraduate and, to some extent, undergraduate medical education. However it is probably the least investigated, discussed and developed aspect of clinical education. This large-scale, interdisciplinary review of literature addressing supervision is the first from a medical education perspective. Purpose To review the literature on effective supervision in practice settings in order to identify what is known about effective supervision. Content The empirical basis of the literature is discussed and the literature reviewed to identify understandings and definitions of supervision and its purpose; theoretical models of supervision; availability, structure and content of supervision; effective supervision; skills and qualities of effective supervisors; and supervisor training and its effectiveness. Conclusions The evidence only partially answers our original questions and suggests others. The supervision relationship is probably the single most important factor for the effectiveness of supervision, more important than the supervisory methods used. Feedback is essential and must be clear. It is important that the trainee has some control over and input into the supervisory process. Finding sufficient time for supervision can be a problem. Trainee behaviours and attitudes towards supervision require more investigation; some behaviours are detrimental both to patient care and learning. Current supervisory practice in medicine has very little empirical or theoretical basis. This review demonstrates the need for more structured and methodologically sound programmes of research into supervision in practice settings so that detailed models of effective supervision can be developed and thereby inform practice.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

AMEE Guide No. 27: effective educational and clinical supervision

TL;DR: This guide reviews what is known about educational and clinical supervision practice through a literature review and a questionnaire survey and identifies the need for a definition and for explicit guidelines on supervision.
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Medical errors involving trainees: a study of closed malpractice claims from 5 insurers.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed malpractice claims in which trainees were judged to have played an important role in harmful errors and found that teamwork breakdowns, lack of supervision and lack of technical competence were the most prevalent contributing factors.
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Resident Duty Hours: Enhancing Sleep, Supervision, and Safety

TL;DR: In 2003, the organization overseeing graduate medical education adopted common program requirements to restrict resident workweeks, including limits to an average of 80 hours over 4 weeks and the longest consecutive period of work to 30 hours in order to protect patients and residents from unsafe conditions resulting from excessive fatigue as discussed by the authors.
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Medical errors involving trainees : A study of closed malpractice claims from 5 insurers. Commentaries

TL;DR: House staff are particularly vulnerable to medical errors owing to teamwork failures, especially lack of supervision, and Graduate medical education reform should focus on strengthening these aspects of training.
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Towards an understanding of resilience and its relevance to medical training.

TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of resilience and its potential relevance to medicine was explored and the importance of resilience in effective professional practice for effective medical practice was also discussed, and whether a focus on resilience might be useful in medical training.
References
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Book

Fundamentals of clinical supervision

TL;DR: This book is practical and covers a wide range of topics, including how to conduct supervision, evaluation of supervision, ethical and legal ramifications of clinical supervision, and organizational planning for the supervisor.
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A Cognitive Perspective on Medical Expertise: Theory and Implications

TL;DR: A new theory of the development of expertise in medicine is outlined, which assumes that expertise is not so much a matter of superior reasoning skills or in-depth knowledge of pathophysiological states as it is based on cognitive structures that describe the featur.
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Supervision in social work

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the history, definition, and significance of the concept of educational supervision and its application in the context of group supervision and group supervision.
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What clinical teachers in medicine need to know.

TL;DR: The author carried out a qualitative study of six distinguished clinical teachers in general internal medicine in 1991, and identified six domains of knowledge essential to teaching excellence in the context of teaching rounds: clinical knowledge of medicine, patients, and the contexts of practice, as well as educational knowledge of learners, general principles of teaching and case-based teaching scripts.