472 472 © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. THE CLINICAL TEACHER 2014; 11: 472–477
Bedside
learning and
teaching
Near-peer bedside
clinical teaching:
example of a successful
programme
Robbie Woods, Ben Ramasubbu and Claire Donohoe, St James’s Hospital, Dublin,
Ireland
Martina Hennessy, School of Medicine, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
SUMMARY
Background : Traditionally, the
formalised teaching of medical
students has begun at senior
trainee level, with teaching from
junior trainees being very limited
and informal. A pilot programme
was set up in a large university
teaching hospital for interns to
provide structured bedside
clinical teaching to final-year
medical students as an adjunct to
their formal teaching. Derived
from the success of this, a similar
programme was run the following
year.
Methods : Feedback from the
pilot programme and its succes-
sor was evaluated using a
five-point Likert scale, and open
illustrative comments were also
collected.
Results : There was a highly
positive response to the initial
programme, with final-year
students being very positive
about participating as teachers
the following year. Some
proceeded to run the pro-
gramme the following year,
providing feedback to suggest
improvements on the pilot
programme.
Discussion : Junior trainees can
organise and provide an addi-
tional option to traditional formal
undergraduate clinical bedside
teaching, which is well received
by students. It also provides a
forum through which trainees can
hone teaching methods and
improve clinical skills.
A programme
was set up
for interns to
provide
structured
bedside clinical
teaching to
final-year
medical
students