Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding?
Objective: To correlate students’ performance with their professional background and motivation to take part in Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) courses. We base our analysis on the self-determination theory that differentiates intrinsic (ambition to perform by individual itself) from extrinsic m...
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German Medical Science GMS Publishing House
2017-12-01
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Series: | GMS Interdisciplinary Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery DGPW |
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Online Access: | http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/iprs/2017-6/iprs000118.shtml |
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DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
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DOAJ |
author |
Klein, Roman Armbruster, Wolfgang Grotz, Martin Höner, Bernd Münzberg, Matthias Grützner, Paul Alfred Wölfl, Christoph Georg |
spellingShingle |
Klein, Roman Armbruster, Wolfgang Grotz, Martin Höner, Bernd Münzberg, Matthias Grützner, Paul Alfred Wölfl, Christoph Georg Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding? GMS Interdisciplinary Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery DGPW Advanced Trauma Life Support ATLS motivation incentives test performance |
author_facet |
Klein, Roman Armbruster, Wolfgang Grotz, Martin Höner, Bernd Münzberg, Matthias Grützner, Paul Alfred Wölfl, Christoph Georg |
author_sort |
Klein, Roman |
title |
Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding? |
title_short |
Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding? |
title_full |
Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding? |
title_fullStr |
Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding? |
title_sort |
pay for performance – motivation to succeed in advanced trauma life support courses – a question of background or funding? |
publisher |
German Medical Science GMS Publishing House |
series |
GMS Interdisciplinary Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery DGPW |
issn |
2193-8091 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
Objective: To correlate students’ performance with their professional background and motivation to take part in Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) courses. We base our analysis on the self-determination theory that differentiates intrinsic (ambition to perform by individual itself) from extrinsic motivation (incentive by external stimuli).Design: We present a non-blinded, monocentric, non-randomized descriptive study of 376 students taking part in an ATLS course at one course site in Germany. Part of a two-day ATLS course are two written tests; we correlate test scores with background information provided by the students in a questionnaire of 13 items (age, sex, adress, board certification, specialty, subspecialty, position, hospital level of care, hospital operator and hospital participation in trauma network, motivation, funding source, condition of funding).Setting: The students were recuited at the BG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen (Germany), a large 528-bed trauma center and one of 13 ATLS course sites in Germany.Participants: 449 ATLS course students taking part in ATLS courses at the above-mentioned course site from February 2009 to May 2010 were sent a questionnaire asking for their background. All 449 course students were eligible to participate. 376 (83.7%) questionnaires were returned, pre- and post-test results of all students aquired and included into our calculations. 312 (83%) were male and 64 (17%) female. The majority (59.3%) of recruited students came from trauma surgery, 21.8% from anesthesiology, 8% from general surgery, 4% from abdominal surgery, 0.5% from vascular or thoracic surgery each and 5.9% from other specialties.Results: Neither age, sex, subspecialty, hospital level of care, hospital operator, or hospital participation in trauma network played a role with respect to motivation or test results. The high degree of intrinsic motivation of consultants (92.3%) had no impact on their test results. Anesthesiologists were higher motivated (75.6% intrinsically motivated) in contrast to all surgical colleagues (63.6%), which showed significant differences in the pre- (89.8% vs. 85.3%, p=0.03) but not the post-test. Of all 13.6% students who were self-payers, 94.1% were intrinsically motivated; the 86.2% whose course fee was accounted for were less likely to be intrinsically motivated (63.9%). Sponsoring however did not have a negative impact on test results. Conditional funding (sponsored only on passing both tests) was detrimental to motivation: 0% of these individuals were intrinsically motivated and they scored significantly lower (82.5%) than all other students in the post-test (86.9%, p=0.002). Overall, intrinsically motivated students overtopped extrinsically motivated students in the post-test (88.0% vs. 83.4%, p<0.001).Conclusions: ATLS course participation is not compulsory for medical doctors in Germany. Intrinsic motivation to take part in these courses is a key prerequisite to increase performance, irrespective of the background of the students. Intrinsically motivated students are ready to invest into their education and vice versa. Conditional funding (course fee only sponsored on passing the course) evokes no intrinsic motivation at all and causes worse results. |
topic |
Advanced Trauma Life Support ATLS motivation incentives test performance |
url |
http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/iprs/2017-6/iprs000118.shtml |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kleinroman payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding AT armbrusterwolfgang payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding AT grotzmartin payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding AT honerbernd payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding AT munzbergmatthias payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding AT grutznerpaulalfred payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding AT wolflchristophgeorg payforperformancemotivationtosucceedinadvancedtraumalifesupportcoursesaquestionofbackgroundorfunding |
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doaj-85b2a04816b14d30aaffcd6d253d67912020-11-25T02:11:21ZdeuGerman Medical Science GMS Publishing HouseGMS Interdisciplinary Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery DGPW2193-80912017-12-016Doc1610.3205/iprs000118Pay for performance – motivation to succeed in Advanced Trauma Life Support courses – a question of background or funding?Klein, Roman0Armbruster, Wolfgang1Grotz, Martin2Höner, Bernd3Münzberg, Matthias4Grützner, Paul Alfred5Wölfl, Christoph Georg6Clinic of orthopedic surgery, trauma surgery and sports traumatology, Krankenhaus Hetzelstift, Neustadt an der Weinstrasse, GermanyClinic of orthopedic surgery and trauma surgery, Kreiskrankenhaus Bergstraße, Heppenheim, GermanyMDKN – Geschäftsbereich Behandlungsfehler, Hannover, GermanySRH-Hochschule Heidelberg, Department for social studies and law, Heidelberg, GermanyBG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen, Department of trauma surgery and orthopedics, Ludwigshafen, GermanyBG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen, Department of trauma surgery and orthopedics, Ludwigshafen, GermanyClinic of orthopedic surgery, trauma surgery and sports traumatology, Krankenhaus Hetzelstift, Neustadt an der Weinstrasse, GermanyObjective: To correlate students’ performance with their professional background and motivation to take part in Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) courses. We base our analysis on the self-determination theory that differentiates intrinsic (ambition to perform by individual itself) from extrinsic motivation (incentive by external stimuli).Design: We present a non-blinded, monocentric, non-randomized descriptive study of 376 students taking part in an ATLS course at one course site in Germany. Part of a two-day ATLS course are two written tests; we correlate test scores with background information provided by the students in a questionnaire of 13 items (age, sex, adress, board certification, specialty, subspecialty, position, hospital level of care, hospital operator and hospital participation in trauma network, motivation, funding source, condition of funding).Setting: The students were recuited at the BG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen (Germany), a large 528-bed trauma center and one of 13 ATLS course sites in Germany.Participants: 449 ATLS course students taking part in ATLS courses at the above-mentioned course site from February 2009 to May 2010 were sent a questionnaire asking for their background. All 449 course students were eligible to participate. 376 (83.7%) questionnaires were returned, pre- and post-test results of all students aquired and included into our calculations. 312 (83%) were male and 64 (17%) female. The majority (59.3%) of recruited students came from trauma surgery, 21.8% from anesthesiology, 8% from general surgery, 4% from abdominal surgery, 0.5% from vascular or thoracic surgery each and 5.9% from other specialties.Results: Neither age, sex, subspecialty, hospital level of care, hospital operator, or hospital participation in trauma network played a role with respect to motivation or test results. The high degree of intrinsic motivation of consultants (92.3%) had no impact on their test results. Anesthesiologists were higher motivated (75.6% intrinsically motivated) in contrast to all surgical colleagues (63.6%), which showed significant differences in the pre- (89.8% vs. 85.3%, p=0.03) but not the post-test. Of all 13.6% students who were self-payers, 94.1% were intrinsically motivated; the 86.2% whose course fee was accounted for were less likely to be intrinsically motivated (63.9%). Sponsoring however did not have a negative impact on test results. Conditional funding (sponsored only on passing both tests) was detrimental to motivation: 0% of these individuals were intrinsically motivated and they scored significantly lower (82.5%) than all other students in the post-test (86.9%, p=0.002). Overall, intrinsically motivated students overtopped extrinsically motivated students in the post-test (88.0% vs. 83.4%, p<0.001).Conclusions: ATLS course participation is not compulsory for medical doctors in Germany. Intrinsic motivation to take part in these courses is a key prerequisite to increase performance, irrespective of the background of the students. Intrinsically motivated students are ready to invest into their education and vice versa. Conditional funding (course fee only sponsored on passing the course) evokes no intrinsic motivation at all and causes worse results.http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/iprs/2017-6/iprs000118.shtmlAdvanced Trauma Life SupportATLSmotivationincentivestest performance |