Feedback plays an important role in training clinical staff, with a direct impact on patient safety in the high-pressure environment of healthcare. In the field of medical education, feedback is defined as “Specific information about the comparison between a trainee's observed performance and a standard, given with the intent to improve the trainee's performance.”
Without robust, timely feedback, students may develop a false sense of competence, potentially jeopardising clinical outcomes in already overburdened regional facilities. In this article, we will discuss frameworks and best practices for providing feedback in clinical training while also discussing the different types of feedback.
|
Terminology |
Clinical Definition |
Core Objective |
|
Feedback |
Comparison of performance to a standard. |
Guide future performance. |
|
Formative |
Ongoing, non-evaluative commentary. |
Shape the learning process. |
|
Summative |
End-of-module evaluative rating. |
Determine goal achievement. |
|
Clinical Accompaniment |
Supervised skills facilitation. |
Equip for health service delivery. |
The conceptualisation of feedback has evolved from a one-way “transmission” model in which an educator simply delivers a critique to a two-way “educational alliance”. Grounded in constructivism, this modern approach views feedback as a dialogue where students co-construct improvement plans with educators. The success of this alliance depends on shared goals, trust and a mutual commitment to professional growth.
Frameworks like the Clinical Performance Feedback Intervention Theory (CP-FIT) further emphasise that feedback effectiveness is mediated by the clinical environment and the supervisor's emotional intelligence. In busy South African wards, maintaining this alliance requires educators to balance service delivery with supportive, personalised input.
To facilitate effective feedback in time-constrained settings, educators can employ several evidence-based models. These provide a roadmap for navigating difficult conversations and ensuring the message is actionable.
The ARCH model reframes the feedback process as 'guidance' rather than mere evaluation. It follows four distinct steps:
A – Allow/Ask for Self-Assessment: Elicit the learner’s thoughts first. Questions like "What specific things do you think you did well?" create a safe space for honest reflection.
R – Reinforce What is Done Well: Address the learner's self-assessed strengths before adding observations of your own. This reinforces good habits and builds confidence.
C – Confirm What Needs Correction: Clarify areas for improvement and check for agreement. Using an "educational alliance" approach, the educator and learner work together to identify the performance gap.
H – Help the Learner with an Action Plan: Collaboratively set SMARTER (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound, Engaging and Rewarding) goals for improvement.
The R2C2 model is an evidence-based reflective approach designed specifically for formal and informal clinical sessions.
Relationship Building: Establishing rapport and explaining the purpose of the feedback to reduce anxiety.
Reaction: Exploring the learner’s emotional reaction to the data or feedback. This phase is critical for ensuring the learner is ready to hear the content.
Content: Ensuring the learner understands the standards or milestones against which they are being measured.
Coaching: Moving from observation to performance change by co-creating a learning change plan.
In more advanced clinical settings, the Agenda-Led Outcome-Based Analysis model (ALOBA) places the learner’s specific agenda at the centre. The educator asks what specific help the learner needs, fostering high-level clinical reasoning.
The SET-GO model is particularly effective for group feedback after observing a clinical encounter:
See: "What did I see?" (Descriptive, non-judgmental observations).
Else: "What else was seen?" (Contributions from the group).
Think: "What does the learner think?" (Self-reflection).
Goals: "What goals are we trying to achieve?" (Outcome-based focus).
Offers: "Any offers on how we get there?" (Collaborative problem-solving).
While these models are theoretically robust, those seeking to implement them in the South African context need to deal with significant systemic challenges.
The primary barrier remains the acute shortage of nursing and medical personnel. Clinical staff often prioritise immediate patient care over student supervision, leading to an imbalance where the volume of learners exceeds the capacity for individualised feedback. Furthermore, deteriorating infrastructure and overcrowded consultation rooms often preclude the private, supportive environment required for sensitive feedback sessions.
Institutional research indicates that practices of feedback and moderation are not yet consistently established across clinical disciplines. In some settings, fewer than 16% of disciplines consistently provide feedback after assessments. Moreover, there is frequently a lack of clarity regarding accountability for clinical accompaniment, a mandatory requirement under South African Nursing Council (SANC) standards.
Transforming clinical training requires moving beyond a single event and toward an institutional culture that values continuous improvement.
Teams benefit from scheduled, constructive 360-degree feedback and ‘brave spaces’ for debriefing. This involves normalising mindfulness and reflective practice to overcome the relational disconnect often found in hierarchical healthcare environments.
Investment in clinical supervisor training is essential. Consultants and senior clinicians must be equipped with the communication and emotional intelligence skills to act as effective leaders and educators. Furthermore, integrating digital tools, including virtual learning environments and AI-augmented feedback, offers promising opportunities for personalised, real-time feedback that can supplement traditional bedside teaching.
Transforming clinical training requires a transition from feedback as an event to feedback as an institutional value.
Key recommendations for clinical teams include:
Normalise Continuous Feedback: Shift from end-of-rotation formalities to frequent, integrated formative commentary.
Invest in Supervisor Training: Clinicians must be equipped with the communication and emotional intelligence skills to act as effective leaders and educators.
Foster Student Literacy: Curricula must explicitly train students in proactive recipiency and self-regulation.
Effective clinical feedback is about more than just correcting mistakes; it is a strategic intervention that drives professional development and patient safety. By adopting structured models like those we discussed, clinical educators can provide the specific, timely, and supportive guidance that South African trainees require.
FPD’s fully online Postgraduate Diploma in Health Professions Education and Leadership is specifically designed to address these clinical realities. By aligning with HPCSA core competencies and international best practices, the programme equips professionals with the pedagogical tools and skills needed to build resilient, feedback-oriented learning communities capable of transforming healthcare delivery.