%0 Journal Article %T Students' perceptions about the transition to the clinical phase of a medical curriculum with preclinical patient contacts; a focus group study %A Merijn B Godefrooij %A Agnes D Diemers %A Albert JJA Scherpbier %J BMC Medical Education %D 2010 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1472-6920-10-28 %X A purposive sample of 21 students participated in three focus groups which met twice during their first weeks of clinical clerkships. The interviews were recorded and transcribed literally. Qualitative content analysis of the transcriptions was performed.According to the students, working in clinical practice was enjoyable, motivated them to study and helped them to develop non-analytical reasoning skills. The students experienced stress due to increased working hours and work load, uncertainty as to what was expected of them and self-perceived lack of knowledge. They did not experience a major gap between the preclinical and clinical phase and felt well prepared for the clerkships. The preclinical patient contacts were considered to be instrumental in this.Early patient contacts seem to ameliorate the shock of practice and prepare students for clinical work. The problems mentioned by the students in this study are mainly related to the socialisation process. The results of this study have to be validated by quantitative research.The transition between the theoretical and the clinical phase of undergraduate medical education has often been characterised as the most stressful period of undergraduate medical education [1-3]. The first clinical year has been described as a period where medical students go through intense emotional experiences [4] and students have described entering the clinical arena as though they were being "thrown in at the deep end" [5]. Boshuizen [6] highlighted that the "shock of practice", a crisis experienced by many medical students on first entering the clinical workplace, is marked by a temporary decrease in their ability to properly use biomedical knowledge in clinical reasoning.The ability to use theoretical knowledge to solve clinical problems is claimed to be enhanced by Problem-Based Learning (PBL) [7]. It has been suggested that the transition from theory to practice is less problematic for students in a PBL curriculum. However, both %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/10/28