Summary
Junior doctors joining Emergency Departments (EDs) are required to rapidly acquire new knowledge and skills, but there is little research describing how this process can be facilitated. This study looked at what would make ED formal induction and early socialisation more effective.
New junior doctors identified that early socialisation should facilitate patient safety and a safe learning space, with much of this process dependent on consultant interactions rather than formal induction. Clear themes around helpful and unhelpful consultant support and supervision were identified. Consultants who acknowledged their own fallibility and maintained approachability produced a safe learning environment, while consultants who lacked interest in their juniors, publicly humiliated them or disregarded the junior doctors’ suggestions were seen as unhelpful and unconstructive.
Effective socialisation, consistent with previous literature, was identified as critical. Junior doctors see consultant behaviours and interactions as key to creating a safe learning space.
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