Adapting the one minute preceptor model to a Swedish context – clinical tutors’ experiences of its usage in primary health care
Erica Rothlind, Helena Salminen, Katarina Rolfhamre, Klas Karlgren, Eva Toth-Pal

TL;DR
This study adapts the One Minute Preceptor model for use in Swedish primary health care and finds that tutors find it easy to use and effective for clinical training.
Contribution
The study introduces and adapts the One Minute Preceptor model to a Swedish primary health care context and explores tutors' experiences with it.
Findings
Tutors found the model flexible, easy to use, and helpful for giving feedback and exploring students' reasoning.
Tutors reported increased self-rated competence after using the model.
The model is feasible to implement and scale up in interprofessional settings.
Abstract
The One Minute Preceptor model is one of few models proven to be effective in clinical training and validated for teaching clinical reasoning and medical knowledge. It has been introduced to tutors from various health care professions and is considered easy to learn. It is, however, not well-known in Scandinavian primary health care, and studies introducing the model in this context are lacking. Moreover, qualitative studies exploring the views of tutors using the model are also lacking. The aim was therefore to adapt the One Minute Preceptor model to a Swedish context and to explore tutors’ experiences of applying it in a primary care setting. A qualitative method with quantitative elements was used. A workshop was designed and held in interprofessional groups at various primary health care centres in Region Stockholm. Follow-up interviews were conducted. Data were analysed using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Simulation-Based Education in Healthcare · Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
