Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package

Background: The consultation is at the very centre of clinical practice. It is in the meeting between doctor and patient that the story is told (and in good practice properly heeded) and decisions are made about the cause and treatment of the patient's problem. Following one year of supervised...

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Main Authors: A. Hastings, D. Cameron, E. Preston-Whyte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2006-04-01
Series:South African Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/479
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author A. Hastings
D. Cameron
E. Preston-Whyte
author_facet A. Hastings
D. Cameron
E. Preston-Whyte
author_sort A. Hastings
collection DOAJ
description Background: The consultation is at the very centre of clinical practice. It is in the meeting between doctor and patient that the story is told (and in good practice properly heeded) and decisions are made about the cause and treatment of the patient's problem. Following one year of supervised internship, South African doctors are required to do a year of community service and these doctors mostly work in understaffed peripheral hospitals. A substantial component of this work is unsupervised consultations with patients suffering from new or complex continuing diseases. On graduation, these doctors therefore require a high level of consultation competence. They must be able to make accurate diagnoses and manage patients' problems reliably and efficiently. The Leicester Assessment Package (LAP) was originally developed to assess the consultation competence of general practitioners in the UK. It was subsequently adapted for use in undergraduate teaching. In 2002, the LAP was presented at a medical education conference in South Africa. As a result, the Department of Family Medicine at Pretoria University began using the LAP in the teaching and formative assessment of the consultation skills of senior students in outpatient clinics. In 2003, the University of the Witwatersrand introduced a four-year graduate entry medical curriculum. The Centre for Health Care Education was interested in assessing whether the LAP would be suitable for the summative assessment of the consultation performance of students during their third and four years of the new curriculum.A workshop course was organised to train senior clinicians from the Universities of Pretoria and the Witwatersrand in the use of the LAP as a means of teaching and assessing the consultation performance of South African medical students. Method: Twenty-two experienced South African medical educators participated in a three-day workshop. Their attitudes to the LAP and the forms of teaching that its use promotes were analysed by responses to pre- and post-workshop questionnaires with Likert-scale and free-text questions. Results: The participants were positive about the LAP at the end of the workshop. They all believed that it was a useful instrument, and a majority would apply this method in their own departments. There were continuing reservations about the feasibility of the method and some respondents felt it would require some adaptation, particularly to the criteria for awarding grades. Conclusions: The workshop participants learnt to use an instrument developed in the United Kingdom that encourages an analytical approach to the assessment and teaching of consultation skills. They believed it would be useful in the contexts in which they worked.
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spelling doaj-art-38cb4a73abde4df7a933dfe609129fe52025-08-20T03:44:01ZengAOSISSouth African Family Practice2078-61902078-62042006-04-0148310.1080/20786204.2006.10873349513Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment PackageA. Hastings0D. Cameron1E. Preston-Whyte2University of LeicesterUniversity of PretoriaUniversity of LeicesterBackground: The consultation is at the very centre of clinical practice. It is in the meeting between doctor and patient that the story is told (and in good practice properly heeded) and decisions are made about the cause and treatment of the patient's problem. Following one year of supervised internship, South African doctors are required to do a year of community service and these doctors mostly work in understaffed peripheral hospitals. A substantial component of this work is unsupervised consultations with patients suffering from new or complex continuing diseases. On graduation, these doctors therefore require a high level of consultation competence. They must be able to make accurate diagnoses and manage patients' problems reliably and efficiently. The Leicester Assessment Package (LAP) was originally developed to assess the consultation competence of general practitioners in the UK. It was subsequently adapted for use in undergraduate teaching. In 2002, the LAP was presented at a medical education conference in South Africa. As a result, the Department of Family Medicine at Pretoria University began using the LAP in the teaching and formative assessment of the consultation skills of senior students in outpatient clinics. In 2003, the University of the Witwatersrand introduced a four-year graduate entry medical curriculum. The Centre for Health Care Education was interested in assessing whether the LAP would be suitable for the summative assessment of the consultation performance of students during their third and four years of the new curriculum.A workshop course was organised to train senior clinicians from the Universities of Pretoria and the Witwatersrand in the use of the LAP as a means of teaching and assessing the consultation performance of South African medical students. Method: Twenty-two experienced South African medical educators participated in a three-day workshop. Their attitudes to the LAP and the forms of teaching that its use promotes were analysed by responses to pre- and post-workshop questionnaires with Likert-scale and free-text questions. Results: The participants were positive about the LAP at the end of the workshop. They all believed that it was a useful instrument, and a majority would apply this method in their own departments. There were continuing reservations about the feasibility of the method and some respondents felt it would require some adaptation, particularly to the criteria for awarding grades. Conclusions: The workshop participants learnt to use an instrument developed in the United Kingdom that encourages an analytical approach to the assessment and teaching of consultation skills. They believed it would be useful in the contexts in which they worked.https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/479consultationassessmentmedical studentcompetence
spellingShingle A. Hastings
D. Cameron
E. Preston-Whyte
Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package
South African Family Practice
consultation
assessment
medical student
competence
title Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package
title_full Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package
title_fullStr Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package
title_full_unstemmed Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package
title_short Teaching and assessing consultation skills: an evaluation of a South African workshop on using the Leicester Assessment Package
title_sort teaching and assessing consultation skills an evaluation of a south african workshop on using the leicester assessment package
topic consultation
assessment
medical student
competence
url https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/479
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AT eprestonwhyte teachingandassessingconsultationskillsanevaluationofasouthafricanworkshoponusingtheleicesterassessmentpackage