Literature DB >> 2337437

An assessment of the clinical skills of fourth-year students at four New England medical schools.

P L Stillman1, M B Regan, D B Swanson, S Case, J McCahan, J Feinblatt, S R Smith, J Willms, D V Nelson.   

Abstract

This paper describes a collaborative effort among five New England medical schools to assess important clinical skills of fourth-year medical students graduating in the class of 1988; results are presented from the four schools that provided sufficient data. Faculty from each school developed 36 patient cases representing a variety of common ambulatory-care problems. Over the course of a day, each student, on average, interacted with 16 different standardized patients, who were nonphysicians trained to accurately and consistently portray a patient in a simulated clinical setting. The students obtained focused histories, performed relevant physical examinations, and provided the patients with education and counseling. At each school, the performance of a small number of the students fell below standards set by the faculty. These deficiencies were not detected with the evaluation strategies currently being used. Although the use of standardized patients should not substitute for the process of faculty observing students as they interact with real patients, it appears that standardized patients can provide faculty with important information, not readily available from other sources, about students' performances of essential clinical activities and the levels of their clinical skills.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2337437     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-199005000-00013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  7 in total

1.  Undergraduate surgical education for the twenty-first century.

Authors:  R W Schwartz; M B Donnelly; B Young; P P Nash; F M Witte; W O Griffen
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1992-12       Impact factor: 12.969

2.  Large-scale use of an objective, structured clinical examination for licensing family physicians.

Authors:  P Grand'Maison; J Lescop; P Rainsberry; C A Brailovsky
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1992-05-15       Impact factor: 8.262

3.  Reforming internal medicine residency training. A report from the Society of General Internal Medicine's task force for residency reform.

Authors:  Eric S Holmboe; Judith L Bowen; Michael Green; Jessica Gregg; Lorenzo DiFrancesco; Eileen Reynolds; Patrick Alguire; David Battinelli; Catherine Lucey; Daniel Duffy
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  Medical students' clinical skills do not match their teachers' expectations: survey at Zagreb University School of Medicine, Croatia.

Authors:  Mario Sicaja; Dominik Romić; Zeljko Prka
Journal:  Croat Med J       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 1.351

5.  Where are the history and the physical?

Authors:  G Bordage
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1995-05-15       Impact factor: 8.262

6.  Influence of the workplace on learning physical examination skills.

Authors:  Robbert Duvivier; Renée Stalmeijer; Jan van Dalen; Cees van der Vleuten; Albert Scherpbier
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2014-03-28       Impact factor: 2.463

7.  Differential determination of perceived stress in medical students and high-school graduates due to private and training-related stressors.

Authors:  Rebecca Erschens; Anne Herrmann-Werner; Katharina Eva Keifenheim; Teresa Loda; Till Johannes Bugaj; Christoph Nikendei; Maria Lammerding-Köppel; Stephan Zipfel; Florian Junne
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-01-31       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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