| Literature DB >> 24049043 |
Abstract
Bedside teaching is seen as one of the most important modalities in teaching a variety of skills important for the medical profession, but its use is declining. A literature review was conducted to reveal its strengths, the causes of its decline and future perspectives, the evidence with regard to learning clinical skills and patient/student/teacher satisfaction. PubMed, Embase and the Cochrane library were systematically searched with regard to terms related to bedside teaching. Articles regarding the above-mentioned subjects were included. Bedside teaching has shown to improve certain clinical diagnostic skills in medical students and residents. Patients, students/residents and teachers all seem to favour bedside teaching, for varying reasons. Despite this, the practice of bedside teaching is declining. Reasons to explain this decline include the increased patient turnover in hospitals, the assumed violation of patients' privacy and an increased reliance on technology in the diagnostic process. Solutions vary from increasingly using residents and interns as bedside teachers to actively educating staff members regarding the importance of bedside teaching and providing them with practical essentials. Impediments to bedside teaching need to be overcome if this teaching modality is to remain a valuable educational method for durable clinical skills.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24049043 PMCID: PMC3976479 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-013-0083-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
Information on bedside teaching found in textbooks
| Book | ‘Bedside’ or BST mentioned in index | Chapter devoted to BST | Chapter on patient-based teaching in ambulatory care | Pages and percentage of total spent on BST* | Pages and % of total spent on patient-based in ambulatory clinic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Jeffries and Huggett, 2010) | No | Yes | No | 11 (5 %) | O |
| (Swanwick, 2010) | Yes | 10 (2.5 %) | 0 | ||
| (Dornan et al. 2011) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Salerno-Kennedy and O’Flynn, 2010) | No | No | No | 2 (1.5 %) | 2 (1.5 %) |
| (Delany and Molloy, 2009) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Bland et al. 2007) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Skeff and Stratos, 2010) | Yes | No | No | 0 | O |
| (Alguire et al. 2008) | No | No | Yes | 0 | 15 (8 %) |
| (Carter and Jackson, n.d.) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Harden and Laidlaw, 2012) | No | Yes | 5 (2 %) | ||
| (Peyton, 1998) | No | Yes | Yes | 15 (8 %) | 8 (4 %) |
| (Fish and Coles, 2005) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Rubenstein and Talbot, 2013) | No | No | Yes | 0 (0 %) | +/−20 (12 %) |
| (Dent and Harden, 2009) | Yes | Yes 6 pp | Yes 9 pp | 6 (1.5) | 9 (2) |
| (Amin and Khoo, 2003) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Newble and Cannon, 2001) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
| (Gunderman, 2006) | No | No | No | 0 | 0 |
BST Bedside teaching
Explanatory information: information on how to do BST. Less than half a page is counted 0
Case-based teaching (teaching after the trainees had seen a patient) is not considered BST
Search syntax for PubMed, Embase and Cochrane
| Database | Syntax (08-01-2013) | Hits |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed (TIAB) | (Medical students OR Students OR Residents OR Interns OR Medical residents OR Medical interns OR Medical teachers OR Medical tutors) AND (Bedside teaching OR Bed-side teaching OR teaching at the bedside OR bedside education OR bedside-education OR bedside demonstration OR bedside training) | 584 |
| Embase TI, AB | The above-mentioned search: all search terms in title and abstract | 7 |
| Cochrane AB, TI, KW | The above-mentioned search: all search terms in title and abstract | 34 |
| Total | 625 |
AB abstract, KW keywords, TI title
Fig. 1Flow-chart depicting the search strategy