Title of article :
Clinical reasoning and knowledge management in final year medical students: the role of Student-led Grand Rounds
Author/Authors :
Kandiah , David Arumaisingam Division of Psychiatry - Medical School - Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences - The University of Western Australia - Perth - WA, Australia
Pages :
7
From page :
683
To page :
689
Abstract :
The development of clinical reasoning and decision-making skills is often limited in medical school curricula. In reality, medical graduates acquire these skills during their first few years of residency. For many, this can be stressful as they may be working under limited supervision as a part of their rotations. Methods Student-led Grand Rounds was developed to transfer both explicit and tacit knowledge to final year medical students. This pilot project was to apply the principles of knowledge management to allow students to be exposed to the reasoning and decision making of common clinical presentations. Student feedback through questionnaires was collated at the end of the program. Results Based on feedback and focus groups, modifications were made to produce a stable program in subsequent clinical rotations. Formal feedback was collated from all the 76 students who participated in the first year. This represented 100% of the cohort for this clinical school for that year. There was a 100% response rate as the feedback forms were given and collected at the end of the last session per block. The student responses were both in ratings defined in a feedback forms and in written comments. A total of 74 of the 76 students rated the program highly. They enjoyed the nonthreatening interactions. The remaining two students preferred more didactic teaching. Conclusion This initiative allows an efficient transfer and utilization of knowledge. This could maximize the acquisition of practical knowledge by medical students as they finish their course in the transition to graduate medical practice.
Keywords :
curriculum development , Student-led Grand Rounds , clinical reasoning , knowledge management , final year medicine
Journal title :
Advances in Medical Education and Practice
Serial Year :
2017
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2624155
Link To Document :
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