Digital clinical placements: Student perspectives and preparedness for placements

Clin Teach. 2023 Feb;20(1):e13558. doi: 10.1111/tct.13558. Epub 2023 Jan 4.

Abstract

Background: In May 2020, first-year students at Imperial College School of Medicine attended a 'digital hospital placement'. Occurring in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, this replaced their first planned hospital placement. The authors analysed student experiences to understand how a digital hospital placement impacted self-perceived clinical and professional development and whether it improved preparedness for face-to-face hospital placements.

Methods: Three hundred ten students participated in this week-long digital placement, which integrated clinical skills, communication and professional behaviour domains. It aimed to prepare students for safe participation in clinical environments. Resources included self-directed and peer learning, virtual simulations (Oxford Medical Simulation) and staff-led debriefing. Surveys were administered after the digital placement and after students' first face-to-face placement to collect quantitative and qualitative data. A reflexive thematic analysis was conducted.

Results: Eighty-three and twenty-nine students completed the postdigital and post-face-to-face placement evaluation respectively. Quantitative results indicated a high self-rated achievement of learning objectives and enthusiasm for digital placements; 83% of respondents supported digital simulations as part of regular medical education. Qualitative analysis identified three superordinate themes: (1) domain integration in digital placements helped students feel better prepared; (2) digital experiential learning is ideally suited to early clinical learning; and (3) virtual placements are a compliment, not an alternative, to face-to-face placements.

Conclusion: Digital placements are a promising means of supporting the challenging transition from classroom learner to clinical learner. They provide a feasible and scalable option for building student confidence and improving preparedness.

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19* / epidemiology
  • Communication
  • Humans
  • Learning
  • Pandemics*
  • Students