Implementation and evaluation of a mentorship program in clinical master in family medicine during the COVID-19 pandemic at the Arabian Gulf University: a longitudinal study.

Implementation and evaluation of a mentorship program in clinical master in family medicine during the COVID-19 pandemic at the Arabian Gulf University: a longitudinal study.

Publication date: Jul 12, 2024

We implemented a contextualized innovative mentorship program in the Clinical Master in Family Medicine (CMFM) program established in April 2020 at Arabian Gulf University. In this paper, we describe the process of this program and derive the major challenges faced by trainees and related corrective actions and their outcomes on high-risk trainees for optimal performance. We conducted a mixed-method longitudinal study of 80 trainees, analyzing information extracted from the Moodle learning platform about five key performance indicators as well as the contents (quantitative and qualitative) of mentoring meeting reports submitted through a validated online form between 2020 and 2022. We analyzed frequencies and themes of challenges and compared trainees’ performance according to time and level of risk. The follow-up of all 80 trainees in two cohorts (40 for each cohort) shows that most are female (93. 75%) and the mean age is 30. 00 +/- 2. 19 years with a ratio of mentors to mentees of 1 to 5. Meetings are conducted through phone calls, virtually, and face-to-face in 62%, 29%, and 8. 3% respectively. The mean number and duration of meetings are 30. 88 +/- 2. 31 and 20. 08 +/- 9. 50 min respectively. Time management is the most reported challenge (41. 3%), followed by health, social, and psychological-related issues in 7. 6%, 4. 6%, and 3% respectively. We extracted four main themes related to trainees, settings of training, e-Portfolio, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The mentorship program captured 12 trainees at high risk for low academic progress (12%) of whom six graduated on time and the remaining had to repeat a few courses the following terms. The performance of the program is stable over time (mean GPA of 3. 30 (SE = 0. 03), versus 3. 34 (SE = 0. 05) for cohorts 1 and 2 in the two years respectively, (P = 0. 33). However, it is slightly lower among high-risk trainees compared to the remaining (GPA = 3. 35 (SE = 0. 03) versus 3. 14 (SE = 0. 08), P = 0. 043) though above the minimum of the threshold of 3 out of 4, required for the master’s degree. The mentorship program captured the struggling trainees and permitted to implement pertinent corrective actions timely, particularly in the context of a two-year intensive CMFM program during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Concepts Keywords
50min Adult
April Challenges
Covid COVID-19
Mentorshipprogramin COVID-19
Pandemic Education, Medical, Graduate
Family medicine
Family Practice
Female
High-risk trainees
Humans
Interventions
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Mentoring
Mentors
Mentorship Program
Mixed method
Pandemics
Performance
Postgraduate
Program Evaluation
SARS-CoV-2

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO process
disease VO time
drug DRUGBANK Isoxaflutole
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease VO effectiveness
disease VO frequency
drug DRUGBANK Ranitidine
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease IDO intervention
drug DRUGBANK Trihexyphenidyl
disease MESH multiple sclerosis
disease MESH systemic lupus erythematosus
pathway KEGG Systemic lupus erythematosus
disease MESH migraine
disease MESH death
disease MESH chronic diseases
disease VO document
disease VO Gap
drug DRUGBANK Esomeprazole
disease MESH Psychological stress
disease MESH burnout
disease VO volume
disease IDO quality
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
disease VO effective
disease VO protocol
disease MESH emergency
disease IDO history
disease VO monthly

Original Article

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