Collaborative Teaching and Curricular Integration in Pre-Intern Clinical Placements: Insights from the Greater Bay Area

Adv Med Educ Pract. 2024 Oct 29:15:1027-1037. doi: 10.2147/AMEP.S471782. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Introduction: The rising demand for knowledge updates and technological innovations in China has made clinical placement teaching challenging. Reforms for innovative teaching models through pilot classes have shown to improve students' academic performance. This novel integration led to the announcement of healthcare collaboration in the Guangdong-Hong-Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area for projects within China's "Global-Innovation-Hub" zones. First Affiliated Hospital (FAH) of Sun Yat-sen University (SYSU) in Guangzhou and the Faculty of Medicine (FMD) of Macau University of Science & Technology (MUST) in Macau have developed an inaugural project for FMD/MUST medical students to perform pre-internships at FAH-SYSU. This study aimed to reflect on students' experiences with collaborative teaching and learning through medical curricular integration in the "Global-Innovation-Hub" zones designed by both institutions for developing integrated curriculum.

Methods: FMD/MUST students attended medical clerkships at FAH-SYSU using a system-integrated curriculum in China's "Global-Innovation-Hub" zones, allowing different education systems at different locations. Post-clerkship surveys ranked teaching models in conjunction with written reflections in response to post-clerkship questionnaires for all participating students. The teaching models were defined by the way supervisors' interaction with students, and written reflections in response to the post-clerkship questionnaire were descriptively and semantically analysed.

Results: The top-ranked teaching models include first "Student-led consultation under supervision in observers' chair with discussion", second "Observe consultation and discuss with the teacher in-between patients in observers' chair" and third "Student-led consultation under supervision in consultants' chair with discussion". The post-clerkship questionnaires showed positive outcomes.

Conclusion: This study demonstrates the successful delivery of collaborative teaching and learning through medical curricular integration in China's "Global-Innovation-Hub" zones. This integration enables the development of a consistent and student-preferred teaching model being introduced into clinical placement curriculum. The unique location of China's "Global-Innovation-Hub" zones in the Guangdong-Hong-Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area allows this integration to significantly improve students' clinical reasoning learning.

Keywords: Global Innovation Hub; Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area; clinical placement teaching; clinical reasoning learning; teaching model integration.