A team of UNMC educators hopes a new toolkit they developed with the help of rural physician preceptors will make it easier for the busy preceptors to mentor future health professionals.
Preceptors supervise, teach and mentor UNMC students in community clinics and hospitals in 80 rural cities. Physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, dentists, pharmacists and others enable students to apply their skills, improve critical thinking and clinical judgment, as well as increase their confidence with patients. Many students typically spend eight weeks with a rural provider as part of fulfilling their educational requirements.
The toolkit, which became available this month, is free, online and user-friendly. It includes information and short videos in a quick and easy format such as new teaching techniques, best practices, evaluation and grading, and tips on how to be an effective preceptor.
To see the toolkit, click here and then click on “Clinical Teaching Resources.”
A group of rural physicians who also are members of the UNMC College of Medicine Alumni Association as well as UNMC preceptors, suggested the idea for the toolkit and provided input to identify the needs of preceptors. The toolkit was developed by the UNMC Interprofessional Academy of Educators.
“UNMC relies heavily on these volunteer faculty members. They are an important part of education for students,” said Geoffrey Talmon, M.D., director of the UNMC Interprofessional Academy of Educators and a UNMC pathologist. “Students tell us they’re the most popular and rewarding experiences of their clinical learning.
“If the students have a solid experience with a preceptor, not only will we have a better health professional, they may stay in Nebraska to practice and be preceptors to students themselves someday. It all comes back to student experience and also supports the idea of rural practice.”
Fourth-year medical student Joe Pachunka said that when he did his rural preceptorship he was lucky and got to see many of his preceptor’s patients each day, doing things like freezing off warts, skin biopsies and other things in the scope of his experience.
“In a rural practice, there are fewer students and residents, unlike here at UNMC, so we get to see many more patients,” he said.
Emily Royer, a second-year medical student, said the preceptors benefit as well. “Preceptors are a huge benefit to us, and students can free up the physicians to spend more time with other patients,” she said.
Dr. Talmon said they also hope to recruit more preceptors, since there’s a big need to place students across Nebraska for their clinical experience.
This is a brilliant idea. Kudos to the Interprofessional Academy of Educators for making it happen!