Students as co-designers in health professional education: a scoping review

被引:0
作者
Ambrosetti, Elodie [1 ,2 ]
Gaudin, Cyrille [3 ]
Flandin, Simon [4 ]
Poizat, Germain [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Geneva, Fac Psychol & Educ Sci, Geneva, Switzerland
[2] Univ Appl Sci & Arts Western Switzerland, Geneva, Switzerland
[3] Univ Limoges, Natl Higher Inst Teaching & Educ, Limoges, France
[4] Univ Geneva, Fac Psychol & Educ Sci, Geneva, Switzerland
关键词
Student-staff partnership; Co-design; Education; Health professions; Literature review; LANGUAGE; CREATION; CARE;
D O I
10.1186/s12909-025-07110-0
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
BackgroundOver the last thirteen years, there has been a notable increase in both research and practice related to student-staff partnerships in higher education. However, within health professional education (HPE), studies on these partnerships remain limited and often rely on broader higher education frameworks. Existing research primarily focuses on role dynamics and relational aspects rather than on structured co-design processes, where students actively contribute to shaping educational content, assessments, or curricula. Building upon previous work, this study specifically examines co-design as a distinct dimension of student-staff partnerships in HPE, an area that has not been thoroughly addressed in recent literature reviews.MethodsIn accordance with the PRISMA-ScR 2018 statement, we performed searches in online databases-Cochrane, Ovid, PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Scopus-for original articles published in English from 2010 to 2023. These articles needed to describe empirical studies focused on co-designed training programs in health professions. We then conducted a qualitative and descriptive analysis of the selected articles to examine how the principle of students as co-designers is portrayed and investigated in health professional education.ResultsThe search (title, abstract, keywords) identified 703 potentially relevant abstracts addressing co-design in healthcare education. Screening of these abstracts narrowed it down to 84 articles. Further evaluation of these full articles resulted in a final sample of 20 articles that met the inclusion criteria. We analyzed the content of these 20 articles using the following categories: basic characteristics (year of publication, country, professional domain, educational grade, topic of the training), co-design characteristics (context and initiative, framework and definition, purposes, stakeholders, process), and study characteristics (aim, research framework, population, data collection and analysis, key findings). Our analysis revealed that co-design in HPE lacks standardized frameworks and rigorous empirical evaluation. Many studies emphasize student contributions but do not provide detailed methodological guidance on how co-design is structured, implemented, or assessed. Additionally, findings indicate that most studies focus on undergraduate education, with postgraduate applications remaining underexplored.ConclusionsThis review underscores co-design as an emerging yet underdeveloped approach in health professional education. While its potential benefits-such as enhancing student engagement, fostering innovation, and improving training relevance-are widely acknowledged, the field lacks structured methodologies and theoretical grounding. Future research should focus on developing clear frameworks, assessing co-design's long-term impact on learning outcomes, and differentiating it from broader collaborative approaches. Strengthening methodological rigor and empirical validation will be essential for positioning co-design as a sustainable and evidence-based practice in health professions education.
引用
收藏
页数:22
相关论文
共 91 条
  • [1] Co-designing formal health professions curriculum in partnership with students: A scoping review
    Abbonizio, Jessica
    Palermo, Claire
    Brand, Gabrielle
    Buus, Niels
    Fossey, Ellie
    Dart, Janeane
    [J]. MEDICAL TEACHER, 2025, 47 (03) : 413 - 424
  • [2] Co-creation of a pedagogical space to support qualitative inquiry: An advanced qualitative collective
    Abboud, Sarah
    Kim, Su Kyung
    Jacoby, Sara
    Mooney-Doyle, Kim
    Waite, Terease
    Froh, Elizabeth
    Sefcik, Justine S.
    Kim, Hyejin
    Sowicz, Timothy Joseph
    Kelly, Terri-Ann
    Kagan, Sarah
    [J]. NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, 2017, 50 : 8 - 11
  • [3] Faculty development for learning and teaching of medical professionalism
    Al-Eraky, Mohamed M.
    Donkers, Jeroen
    Wajid, Gohar
    Van Merrienboer, Jeroen J. G.
    [J]. MEDICAL TEACHER, 2015, 37 : S40 - S46
  • [4] Bakhai Neha, 2016, MedEdPORTAL, V12, P10520, DOI 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10520
  • [5] Is health professional education making the most of the idea of 'students as partners'? Insights from a qualitative research synthesis
    Barradell, Sarah
    Bell, Amani
    [J]. ADVANCES IN HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION, 2021, 26 (02) : 513 - 580
  • [6] Student participation in the development of interprofessional education courses: Perceptions and experiences of faculty members and the students
    Behrend, Ronja
    Franz, Anne
    Czeskleba, Anja
    Maaz, Asja
    Peters, Harm
    [J]. MEDICAL TEACHER, 2019, 41 (12) : 1366 - 1371
  • [8] Enabling mental health student nurses to work co-productively
    Best, Stephanie
    Koski, Arja
    Walsh, Lynne
    Vuokila-Oikkonen, Paivi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH TRAINING EDUCATION AND PRACTICE, 2019, 14 (06) : 411 - 422
  • [9] Addressing potential challenges in co-creating learning and teaching: overcoming resistance, navigating institutional norms and ensuring inclusivity in student-staff partnerships
    Bovill, C.
    Cook-Sather, A.
    Felten, P.
    Millard, L.
    Moore-Cherry, N.
    [J]. HIGHER EDUCATION, 2016, 71 (02) : 195 - 208
  • [10] Bovill C., 2019, International Journal for Students as Partners, V3, P91, DOI DOI 10.15173/IJSAP.V3I2.3953