Title of article
Competency-based learning in traumatology
Author/Authors
David Hill Radcliffe، نويسنده , , Paul Stalley، نويسنده , , David Pennington، نويسنده , , Michael Besser، نويسنده , , William McCarthy، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
5
From page
136
To page
140
Abstract
Background
A multidisciplinary, competencybased trauma teaching program was introduced for final year medical students (n = 67) at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (RPAH) in 1994 to complement the surgical clerkship.
Methods
The method involved small groups rotating through a series of teaching stations each structured to address a predetermined competency. Four 3-hour sessions were held on the subject areas of resuscitation, plastic, orthopedic, and neurotrauma.
Performance in the trauma section of a summative Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE), 6 months after the teaching, was compared with that of a control group (n = 127) from other campuses where trauma was taught by a series of discipline-based lectures. Three trauma OSCE stations were designed to test psychomotor skills while five addressed aspects of the cognitive domain. Checklists were used to ensure standardization of scoring in a range of questions asked or skills tested at each station.
Results
The marks of the RPAH students (mean 78% D 9%) were significantly higher (P< 0.0005) than the controls (mean 70% D 9%) in the 8 trauma questions. There was no significant difference (P = 0.8) in marks obtained by the study group (mean 61 % D 8%) and controls (mean 63% D 7%) in 22 questions sampling a wide spectrum of nontrauma subject areas. The study group performed significantly better in one of the three skills stations and three of the five problem-solving stations when compared with the control group.
Conclusion
The innovation has the potential to fulfill a need for an integrated trauma program in the undergraduate core curriculum
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Record number
619942
Link To Document