| Literature DB >> 21143996 |
Marcia L Clark1, Carol R Hutchison, Jocelyn M Lockyer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The increasing burden of illness related to musculoskeletal diseases makes it essential that attention be paid to musculoskeletal education in medical schools. This case study examines the undergraduate musculoskeletal curriculum at one medical school.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21143996 PMCID: PMC3012667 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-10-93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Clinical Presentations for MSK Course
| Painful Limb |
|---|
| • Painful Swollen Limb |
| • Venous Thrombosis and Hyper-coagulable state |
| • Intermittent claudication |
| Hair and Nail Complaints |
| Skin Tumors, Benign and Malignant |
| Skin Blisters |
| Skin Rash (Dermatitis) |
| Joint Pain, Mono-Articular (Acute, Chronic) |
| Joint Pain, Polyarticular (Acute, Chronic) |
| Regional Pain, Non-Articular (Hand, Wrist, Elbow, Shoulder, Spine, Hips, Knee, Foot) |
| Skin Lesions and Systemic Disease |
| • Skin/Immunologic Diseases |
| • Primary and Secondary Lesions (Structure & Function of Skin) |
| Fractures and Dislocations |
| Ear Pain Hearing Loss, and Tinnitus |
| Vision Loss |
| • Chronic Visual Loss |
| • Acute Vision Loss |
| Eye Redness |
| • Red Eye |
| • Eye Injuries |
Figure 1Burden of illness of MSK disorders.
Figure 2Skin Concept Map.
Course Documents Accessed for Case Study Research Findings
| Accreditation documents and website |
|---|
| Strategic Planning documents |
| Liaison Committee for Medical Education website information |
| Personal Communication with the Associate Dean of UGME |
| End of Course Evaluation - Students |
| End of Course Evaluation - Faculty |
| Course Chair Report |
| Mean total scores, end of course evaluations Class of 2005-2009 |
| Interview data from key informants |
| Class of 2009 Student Handbook |
| Student Evaluation Policy |
| Core Syllabus |
| Undergraduate Medical Education Clinical Correlation Information and Responsibilities for Preceptors and Students. |
| Concept map - Skin and MSK |
| Curriculum Information System - student resource base |
| Computer Disks given to students - Physical Exam Skills of the MSK system and Approach to Rheumatologic Diseases |
| Handbook of procedural skills |
| Personal Communications with students and administrative personnel. |
| Faculty Listing for Teaching of MSK course |
| Course Curriculum Committee Minutes |
| Student Evaluation Policy |
| Course Blueprints |
| Summative Examination - Outline |
Figure 3Kern, David E., M.PH., Patricia A. Thomas, M.D., Donna M. Howard, R.N., Dr.P.H., and Eric B. Bass. Curriculum Development for Medical Education: A Six-Step Approach. p.6, Figure 1.1. © 1998, 2009 The Johns Hopkins University Press. Reprinted with permission of The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Strengths and Weaknesses of the MSK Curriculum
| Was MSK course structured according to the standard principles for curriculum design? | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Problem identification and general needs assessment conducted | Data identified in Table 1 | Course evaluation feedback from students and faculty used to revise curriculum. | No evidence that demographic, patient, hospitalization or other data used to guide content. | |
| Needs assessments with targeted learners | Data identified in Table 1 | No evidence that a targeted needs assessment conducted. | ||
| Goals and objectives | Course documents | Course goals not explicitly stated. | "Get defined objectives, we have...those for teaching and we have to use those for the evaluation." | |
| Educational Strategies | Course documents, evaluation forms, interview data. | Complex and creative curriculum. Curriculum uses diverse educational strategies to deliver content maximizing opportunities for appropriate knowledge, skills and attitudes to be developed. | Clinical presentations not well developed. | "I had no idea that the course was organized into 25 presentations until this moment." |
| Implementation | Data identified in Table 1 | Many people committed to delivering curriculum. | Small group learning sessions larger (n = 18) than would be optimal for small group learning. | "Too much information for the length of the course. Six weeks or six and a half weeks is not long enough." |
| Evaluation | Student examination data from MSK and courses preceding and following MSK. | Examination delivered to students provides evidence that it was reliable. Student and faculty evaluation feedback data provides evidence that it is reliable. | Blueprint, objectives and student examination are not aligned. | "My ability to MEMORIZE was tested, not my ability to solve problems." |
| Integration of curricular components | Core documents. | Poor alignment of objectives with content presented and with student examination. | "...Cover in lectures and in core document what will be tested on the exam." | |
Perceptions of students and faculty members about the MSK Curriculum
| What are the perceptions of students and faculty members about the strengths and weaknesses of the MSK course? | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Course evaluation forms from students and faculty. | Faculty were committed to the course. | Too many students in small groups. | "Independent study is a strength...[this] course that stands quite a significant volume of material ...It offers the student the opportunity for both didactic and directed learning and self directed learning or independent study" |
Evidence of validity and reliability of surveys and student MCQ examination
| What is the evidence that the student and faculty feedback surveys used to evaluate the MSK course were valid and reliable? | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Student and faculty evaluation feedback data. | Student feedback evaluation was very reliable (α >.92). Faculty feedback was reliable (α >.76). | ||
| Student examination data for MSK course and for courses preceding and following MSK. | Examination reliable (Cronbachs α r = 0.76). | MSK underrepresented on the exam relative to other content in course (special senses and dermatology). | "Integrating ophthalmology and ENT into the MSK course before doing neuro made learning the subject matter very difficult." |