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Medical Mentoring

Supporting Students, Doctors in Training and General Practitioners

By (author) David Jeffrey
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Royal College of General Practitioners, London, United Kingdom
Published: 22nd Oct 2014
Dimensions: w 170mm h 246mm d 8mm
ISBN-10: 0850843545
ISBN-13: 9780850843545
Barcode No: 9780850843545
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Synopsis
There is a huge need for supportive mentoring among students, doctors in training and general practitioners. Mentoring is an effective way of supporting doctors and preventing problems. The author argues that all doctors should seek a mentor. Medical training involves transitions; school to university, student to junior doctor and trainee to GP. It is at these transition points that mentoring is most valuable. This book - Medical Mentoring - is a practical guide to using mentoring to help doctors with their professional development, support them when difficulties arise and prevent problems developing. If you're considering mentoring, want to adapt your approach or develop your mentoring skills, this is the book for you. This practical guide, illustrated by case stories: will give prospective mentors the confidence to improve student/doctor support defines the role of a medical mentor and the benefits of providing support to doctors and students discusses reasons why medical students and doctors struggle during their careers gives practical advice on identifying the student/doctor in difficulty discusses what students/doctors value in a mentor offers a practical guide to mentoring using a clinical model. At present doctors and other healthcare professionals are perceived to be less caring and compassionate. GPs face an increasing workload with little support. Recruitment to general practice is difficult in some areas. Although mentoring is well established in nursing and educational circles, there is still a culture in medicine that a doctor should be able to cope by themselves. Seeking support is still viewed by some as a weakness. It is puzzling that clinicians who use their skills to support and care for patients rarely give the same level of attention to their colleagues. The book shows how these clinical skills can be adapted effectively in mentoring, while acknowledging that mentees are not patients. This guide aims to give prospective mentors the confidence to improve student/doctor support and so will improve recruitment and retention of students and GPs, and enable doctors to deliver more effective patient care.

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This wonderful book suggests that seeking mentoring should not be seen as a weakness, but rather as an essential part of professional learning and development. It shows how we can all be mentors, and how we can all benefit from being mentored. It argues persuasively that mentoring should not be an optional extra, but rather should become an integrated and fundamental part of medical practice. The author's work, easy to read, packed with practical case examples, and ordered in an accessible way, demystifies mentoring and shows us that it can be done pretty much by anyone, for anyone. Justin Amery, in the foreword to the book