| Literature DB >> 17594558 |
C Nikendei1, B Kraus, M Schrauth, P Weyrich, S Zipfel, J Jünger.
Abstract
Clerkships are generally seen as a very favourable learning environment for final-year students. However, in recent years the clinical experience of final-year students has been reported to decline progressively. It was decided, therefore, to introduce an innovative skills training model in internal medicine. Sixty final-year students received four consecutive days of training during their first week, consisting of three-hour sessions on each day. The skills training course reflected a patient history from admission to discharge and included all required routine procedures, typical forms/files and computer interactions. Acceptability was measured with self-administered surveys post-intervention and again 16 weeks later; self-assessment was measured pre-/post-intervention. The skills training course was well accepted by the students and led to a significant improvement in self-assessment. It was considered to be very helpful for work on the wards in both the immediate and the long-term retrospective evaluation. The final-year skills training course allows students to learn how to handle specific tools and applications for their work on the ward. It possesses face validity and is easy to integrate.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17594558 DOI: 10.1080/01421590600922917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Teach ISSN: 0142-159X Impact factor: 3.650