Teaching medical students and recruitment to psychiatry : attitudes of psychiatric clinicians , academics and trainees

Aims and method An online survey was used to examine the attitudes of clinical, academic and trainee psychiatrists on the delivery of undergraduate education and why students are not choosing psychiatry as a career. This paper explores whether attitudes to teaching psychiatry to medical students is a factor in poor recruitment to the specialty.

Results Overall, 390 psychiatrists completed the survey. All groups were highly committed to psychiatry education, but there were significant differences in attitudes that may have an impact on the delivery of medical student teaching, which in turn may influence recruitment. Five major themes emerged from the survey, the most dominant being stigmatisation of psychiatric patients and professionals by the medical profession. These divergent attitudes to teaching and stigma may be contributing to low levels of recruitment into psychiatry.

Clinical implications Education of the next generation of psychiatrists is a high priority and active measures are needed to increase commitment and enthusiasm in undergraduate education.

There is growing concern in British psychiatry about the poor rates of recruitment into the specialty. 1There is no doubt that medical students' educational experience of psychiatry plays a great role in determining whether they choose a career in psychiatry. 2 But even when students' attitudes to psychiatry are affected positively during their psychiatry placement (in year 3 or 4 of the medical course), this effect can be short-lived and diminishes during their final year. 3 It is even more concerning that students entering medical school with an interest in pursuing a career in psychiatry change their minds during their time in medical school. 2he large majority of medical students will not become psychiatrists; for them a psychiatry clinical placement will be the only experience of psychiatric practice before they begin to work as doctors.This critical and essential training experience includes learning about the management of mental disorders, suicide, self-harm, violence, substance misuse, psychopharmacology, and treatment of those patients who have comorbid medical and psychiatric illnesses.More recently, there is also an emphasis on wellbeing and population health, and how to ensure that positive emotional states are protected and nurtured in the workplace and in family life.Recent changes in the organisation of mental healthcare, including more treatment in the community, preventive psychiatry, and psychosocial interventions, challenge conventional roles in medicine and might deter doctors who favour working in hospital settings.The way the skills and attitudes necessary for modern psychiatric practice are taught and developed will shape medical students' attitudes to psychiatry; as part of this learning experience, students will learn to deal with stigma towards psychiatric patients and the psychiatric profession.
At present, undergraduate education in psychiatry is delivered in a variety of ways across the UK by psychiatrists with either university or National Health Service (NHS) trust appointments. 4These two groups have different types of job plans, different priorities, and different demands on their time.For instance, it has been reported that academic psychiatry departments are disinterested in teaching and concerned only with research, whereas NHS consultants are more focused on service demands. 5This situation is not limited to psychiatry 6 but the way it is managed in psychiatric teaching and mentoring may be different. 7To explore these attitudes towards teaching psychiatry, we surveyed clinicians and academics who are practising as psychiatrists in the UK.We asked their views on the delivery of undergraduate education and why students are not choosing psychiatry as a career.Aims and method An online survey was used to examine the attitudes of clinical, academic and trainee psychiatrists on the delivery of undergraduate education and why students are not choosing psychiatry as a career.This paper explores whether attitudes to teaching psychiatry to medical students is a factor in poor recruitment to the specialty.
Results Overall, 390 psychiatrists completed the survey.All groups were highly committed to psychiatry education, but there were significant differences in attitudes that may have an impact on the delivery of medical student teaching, which in turn may influence recruitment.Five major themes emerged from the survey, the most dominant being stigmatisation of psychiatric patients and professionals by the medical profession.These divergent attitudes to teaching and stigma may be contributing to low levels of recruitment into psychiatry.
Clinical implications Education of the next generation of psychiatrists is a high priority and active measures are needed to increase commitment and enthusiasm in undergraduate education.
Declaration of interests None.

EDUCATION & TRAINING
Teaching medical students and recruitment to psychiatry: attitudes of psychiatric clinicians, academics and trainees

Method
The questionnaire used in this study was devised following consultation with groups of psychiatry academics, clinicians and trainees.The views of these groups were gathered independently by the authors and all items raised were included in the questionnaire.The survey was given online using the Survey Monkey website (www.surveymonkey.com).The links were circulated to North East London Foundation Trust, East London NHS Foundation Trust, Northern Ireland, Cardiff (Wales) and also advertised nationally in the Royal College of Psychiatrists' member's e-Newsletter.Data were collected over a 3-month period.The participants were anonymous but were asked about their position, age, gender, year of qualification and primary post.Chi-squared analysis was used to test whether there were any significant associations between job type, age, gender and the responses for each of the separate 17 attitudinal survey items.
The questionnaire also included a free-text response question: are students not taking up psychiatry as a career?' Major themes were identified from the responses independently by two researchers (A.K. and N.D.) and coded systematically across all responses; frequency counts of the five emergent themes are reported with some verbatim examples.

Results
Our survey was completed by 390 people (38.5% women); their ages and roles are shown in Table 1.Table 2 shows the responses of the three groups to each of the attitudinal items.Significant differences (P50.05) in responses between groups are shown in bold in Table 2.
A higher number of clinicians compared with academics and trainees agreed that they did not have time to teach medical students (P50.001).Both clinicians (42%) and academics (47%) felt that teaching medical students did   not contribute to their future career prospects compared with 21% of trainees (P50.001).Fewer clinicians considered teaching to be a significant component of their appraisal compared with trainees and academics.There were also differences on items on who should be teaching psychiatry: a higher number of clinicians agreed that this should be carried out by individuals who have identified teaching sessions in their job plans.More trainees proposed that it was the responsibility of all doctors to teach medical students and that this should be carried out by specialist trainees.More academics believed that academics with dedicated full-time teaching status should be appointed.Trainees and clinicians agreed that those undertaking undergraduate teaching should receive training in educational methods.A significantly lower proportion of academics agreed that educational research is as important as clinical and scientific research.
Only about 39% of respondents answered the open question: 'Why are students not taking up psychiatry?' The responses were coded to show the five dominant themes that emerged (Box 1).

Discussion
A limitation of this study is that these are the views of those who responded to an online survey and they may not be a representative sample of the views of all UK psychiatrists.Our questionnaire was developed for this specific survey, having been generated in pilot work, and although this is a reasonable approach to use when there is no consensus, replication using these questions in other centres is necessary.However, a strength of the study is that a large number of psychiatrists responded to the survey and there was a good distribution between trainees, NHS clinicians and academics similar to that among psychiatrists in the UK.There was also a high consistency in the views expressed.
The overwhelming majority of respondents endorsed the statement that good teaching in psychiatry is important and 80-90% expressed a personal interest in teaching; however, a large proportion felt that they did not have enough allocated teaching time and that teaching medical students did not contribute to their career progression.Lack of time was endorsed mostly by those with NHS clinical consultant posts and probably reflects the previously reported general lack of realistic job planning to allow time to teach students, including preparation and managing feedback from students. 5Creation of NHS teaching consultant posts is one approach to improving this situation and a majority endorsed this choice, but, in the current financial climate, this may become an unwelcome option.
It is encouraging, although perhaps not surprising, that the younger the participants, the more keen they were on teaching.This could be due to the proverbial 'enthusiasm in the young and cynicism in the old', but it could also reflect that they themselves received better teaching than their older counterparts and place a greater value on it.The question is -should these enthusiastic young trainees be delivering a larger proportion of the teaching?They themselves think they should but again this is often difficult because proper allowance for teaching is not made in their job plans.This is very unfortunate, because the General Medical Council has stated clearly that it is a requirement of all doctors to participate in teaching 8 and as future consultants our trainees will be delivering most of the clinical teaching.It is a vital part of their own training to gain skills and experience in clinical education.Also, junior doctors may make more effective role models to inspire students to choose a career in psychiatry.Psychiatry is increasingly taught in primary care settings. 4This may help to reduce stigma, and also tailor teaching to the majority of medical students who will work in primary care; however, some specialists think psychiatry would then become a postgraduate-only specialty for those choosing this career path.General practitioners (GPs) would then not experience in-depth training in modern psychiatric practice, thus, perhaps, permitting splits between specific services and persistence of stigma in other settings.Survey participants had strong views that psychiatry could not be taught as well by GPs as by psychiatrists -this is in contrast to the views of GPs where over a third felt competent to teach psychiatry; 9 however, both groups are probably considering very different types of psychiatric treatments, patients, and levels of need and complexity.The shift of mental health policy to primary care and public health also argues for new approaches to psychiatric teaching and practice, beyond the relatively smaller number of patients with the most complex and challenging illnesses.
Views were generally similar in the three groups of psychiatrists but there was one obvious difference between academic and trust respondents on attitudes towards educational research.Academics rated this as being less important than scientific research and this may reflect the fact that the standard of educational research varies widely and even high-standard research will rarely be accepted by high impact factor journals.The driving force in most academic departments is research performance measured by research spend and publications in high-impact journals of original data of international importance.This often relegates teaching activities to lower priority tasks and may also explain the lower level of enthusiasm in academics for posts that are purely educational.However, there is a recently growing recognition that undergraduate medical education needs to be prioritised to nurture future academic clinicians and address the wider crisis in academic medicine. 4t is concerning that, when asked why students do not choose psychiatry as a career, more than half of survey respondents specifically cited the stigmatisation of psychiatry as the greatest factor.Many of our respondents referred specifically to surgeons as putting down the profession.There are as many jokes about surgeons as there are about psychiatrists but surgeons do not complain about being stigmatised or face a crisis of confidence.Perhaps our own perception of how we are regarded is what puts the students off?We are in a strong position to overcome any stigmatisation of our profession and we need to take an active stand.Stigma comprises ignorance, prejudice and discrimination. 10By educating our students properly we can eliminate ignorance.The current advances being made in psychiatry are unprecedented.We are now gaining a deep understanding of how biological, psychological and environmental factors interact to cause mental health disorders.Many of the disorders that we treat are major public health problems, for example, depression is predicted to become the second most common disease burden by 2030. 11Negative attitudes resulting in prejudice are based on the perceptions that psychiatry is not medical or scientific and that prognosis is hopeless 12 -but who else can change this view among our colleagues if not psychiatrists educating the next generation of doctors?There are some obvious problems facing British psychiatry, such as the downgrading of medicine in our treatment practice 13 and psychiatrists' own beliefs that the prognosis of patients is poor, 12 which need to be addressed before we can begin to inspire our medical students to enter the profession.
We believe that only a change in our own attitudes to psychiatry and a commitment and enthusiasm to educating our medical students is going to change the attitudes of the next generation of doctors.
EDUCATION & TRAININGKorszun et al Teaching medical students and recruitment to psychiatry

Table 1
Age and primary role of participants NHS, National Health Service.

Table 2
Percentage of each group agreeing with the survey item (significant differences in bold) NHS, National Health Service.
EDUCATION & TRAININGKorszun et al Teaching medical students and recruitment to psychiatryBox 1 Views on why students are not taking up psychiatry