Implementing and Improving Bedside Teaching and Experiential Learning for Medical Students During Psychiatry Placements
Joseph Farmer, James Gardner, James Bloomfield

TL;DR
This study improved medical students' confidence in psychiatric skills through structured bedside teaching during psychiatry placements.
Contribution
A novel approach to enhance bedside teaching and sign-up processes for medical students in psychiatry placements.
Findings
74 students attended bedside teaching sessions, with significant confidence gains in psychiatric history and MSE.
Post-teaching surveys showed 85% confidence in taking a psychiatric history and completing an MSE.
Eight PDSA cycles refined the sign-up process and improved the teaching experience.
Abstract
Aims: The General Medical Council’s (GMC) outcomes for graduate doctors includes the completion and interpretation of a psychiatric history, mental state examination (MSE), risk assessment and cognitive examination. To achieve these outcomes, medical students rotate through specialist psychiatry placements during their undergraduate training. Psychiatry rotations typically involve observing doctors in ward rounds and clinics and attending classroom-based teaching sessions. Feedback from local medical students highlighted that there was limited opportunity to complete a full psychiatric history, including a risk assessment, and mental state examination. This Quality Improvement Project (QIP) aimed to 1. Develop a reliable and accessible sign-up process and 2. Improve medical student’s bedside teaching experience during their psychiatry placement. Methods: A driver diagram was used to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills · Empathy and Medical Education
