| Literature DB >> 35010658 |
Ester Orsini1, Marilisa Quaranta1, Giulia Adalgisa Mariani1, Sara Mongiorgi1, Lucio Cocco1, Anna Maria Billi1, Lucia Manzoli1, Stefano Ratti1.
Abstract
The University of Bologna School of Medicine in 2003 adopted a near-peer teaching (NPT) program with senior medical students teaching and assisting younger students in human anatomy laboratories. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and outcomes of this program-unique on the Italian academic panorama-from the tutors' perspective. An anonymous online survey was administered to all those who acted as peer tutors in the period from 2003 to 2021; it evaluated tutors' perceptions regarding the influence of the tutoring experience on their skillset gains, academic performance, and professional career. Furthermore, tutors were asked to express their views on the value of cadaver dissection in medical education and professional development. The overall perception of the NPT program was overwhelmingly positive and the main reported benefits were improved long-term knowledge retention and academic performance, improved communication, team-working and time management skills, and enhanced self-confidence and motivation. Most tutors strongly believed that cadaver dissection was an invaluable learning tool in medical education, helped them to develop professionalism and human values, and positively influenced the caring of their future patients. Nearly all the participants highlighted the importance of voluntary body donation for medical education and research. The present results supported the thesis that tutors themselves benefited from the act of teaching peers; this impactful experience equipped them with a wide range of transferable skills that they could draw on as future educators and healthcare professionals.Entities:
Keywords: cadaver dissection; human anatomy; learning; medical school; near-peer teaching
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35010658 PMCID: PMC8744748 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19010398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Summary of survey questions and responses.
| Questions and Statements | SD | D | A | SA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Q1 | I had a clear career path plan when I entered medical school | 26.1% | 39.0% | 24.1% | 10.8% |
| Q2 | My career path plan has been affected by near-peer tutoring experience | 12.7% | 32.4% | 37.7% | 17.2% |
| Q3 | Attending/graduating at University of Bologna medical school has brought an added value to my education | 0.7% | 5.1% | 35.2% | 59.0% |
| Q4 | In the case of positive response to the previous question, it was my experience as a neer-peer tutor that mainly affected it | 0.4% | 6.5% | 45.6% | 47.5% |
| Q5 | I noticed differences in attitudes and preparation among colleagues who were not enrolled as near-peer tutors | 3.0% | 19.2% | 47.7% | 30.1% |
| Q6 | As a tutee, prior to being enrolled as tutor, I appreciated/enjoyed the near-peer teaching model in human anatomy education | 0.7% | 0.7% | 15.2% | 83.4% |
| Q7 | I would recommend near-peer tutoring experience as a beneficial tool in preclinical education pathway to early years medical students | 0.0% | 0.7% | 12.3% | 87.0% |
| A | What were the strengths of this neer-peer tutoring model? | Open-ended question | |||
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| Q8 | Near-peer tutoring experience helped me to develop the following skills: Team-working skills Organizational skills Communication skills Problem solving skills Planning skills Technical skills | ||||
| 1.1% | 5.2% | 36.2% | 57.5% | ||
| 0.7% | 6.7% | 41.8% | 50.8% | ||
| 0.0% | 1.0% | 14.3% | 84.7% | ||
| 1.7% | 14.0% | 44.2% | 40.1% | ||
| 2.1% | 12.9% | 47.4% | 37.6% | ||
| 3.2% | 20.5% | 30.0% | 46.3% | ||
| Q9 | The opportunity to constantly revise anatomy helped me to improve my academic performance | 0.7% | 6.3% | 43.9% | 49.1% |
| Q10 | Near-peer tutoring experience helped me to increase my self-confidence | 0.7% | 8.4% | 41.5% | 49.4% |
| Q11 | Near-peer tutoring experience helped me to develop a proactive approach to the degree course | 0.0% | 9.8% | 37.1% | 53.1% |
| B | Describe the role near-peer tutoring experience plays/played in your professional career. | Open-ended question | |||
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| Q12 | Cadaver dissection is an invaluable and necessary learning tool in: undergraduate medical education postgraduate medical education | ||||
| 0.0% | 2.4% | 20.8% | 76.8% | ||
| 2.2% | 16.0% | 35.4% | 46.2% | ||
| Q13 | Cadaver dissection is a powerful tool in positively shaping professional and ethical values like compassion, empathy and respect toward patients | 0.6% | 3.6% | 30.9% | 64.9% |
| C | Did near-peer tutoring experience positively influence your perception towards body donation for medical education and scientific purposes? | Open-ended question | |||
Abbreviations: SD, strongly disagree; D, disagree; A, agree; SA, strongly agree.
Figure 1Bar charts showing responses to questions 1 and 2 of the survey. Q1: I had a clear career path plan when I entered medical school. Q2: My career path plan has been affected by near-peer tutoring experience.
Figure 2Bar charts showing responses to questions 3, 4, and 5 of the survey. Q3: Attending/graduating at University of Bologna medical school has brought an added value to my education. Q4: In the case of positive response to the previous question, it was my experience as a near-peer tutor that mainly affected it. Q5: I noticed differences in attitudes and preparation among colleagues who were not enrolled as near-peer tutors.
Figure 3Word cloud representing tutors’ responses to the open-ended question: “What were the strengths of this near-peer tutoring model?”
Summary of the narrative comments grouped into themes and subthemes.
| Themes | Subthemes | Example Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Impact on education, academic achievement, and career | Education | The hands-on experience has allowed a better memorization of what has been studied in books. |
| Academic achievement | Seeing colleagues only a few years older able to master such a complex subject in such a clear and confident way helped me to deal with it in a different way when preparing for the exam and contributed to the considerable interest in the subject that I still study today. | |
| Career | I consider my experience as anatomy tutor as a fundamental part of my professional career. I have not only been able to follow several students during their second year of studies, but I have also been able to have a concrete example of interdisciplinary collaboration and functionality, fundamental in my work. | |
| Improvement of professional and personal skills | Practical skills | It prepares for what the hospital reality is and promotes the development of clinical thinking and technical skills. It makes you extremely prepared and allows you to interact during internships. |
| Attitude | It allowed to understand the importance of anatomical-clinical correlations and to develop teaching and communication skills; the organization of teaching activities contributed to the development of organizational skills. | |
| Knowledge | It has certainly consolidated my knowledge, giving me an overview of the topographical anatomy otherwise difficult to acquire with the theoretical study only, which helps me a lot in my current clinical work, especially in the interpretation of diagnostic images. It also allowed me to get in touch with the world of research and conferences at an early stage. | |
| Impact of cadaver dissection on learning and professional development | Awareness of body donation | Before my experience as a student in the dissecting room, I did not even know that there was the possibility of studying anatomy on cadaver in Italy. |
| Effectiveness of body donation | Yes. Studying anatomy on cadaver and not only in atlases is essential to fully and deeply understand it. Donating one’s body for such purposes is a way to promote the education of future doctors and therefore the quality of public health. | |
| Ethical value of body donation | Yes. Body donation is a gesture of great generosity and unconditional trust in medical science which contributes to the advancement of medical education and biomedical research. Treating donors and our future patients with the highest level of respect, care and dedication will be our concrete forms of gratefulness. |
Figure 4Bar chart displaying results of self-assessment in skills development (Q8).
Figure 5Word cloud representing tutors’ responses to the open-ended question: “Describe the role near-peer tutoring experience plays/played in your professional career”.
Figure 6Bar charts showing responses to questions 12 and 13 of the survey. Q12: “Cadaver dissection is an invaluable and necessary learning tool in undergraduate/postgraduate medical education”. Q13: “Cadaver dissection is a powerful tool in positively shaping professional and ethical values like compassion, empathy and respect toward patients”.
Medical specialties divided into areas, classes, and types.
| MEDICAL AREA | SURGICAL AREA | CLINICAL SERVICES AREA |
|---|---|---|
| Class of GENERAL AND SPECIALISTIC CLINICAL MEDICINE Internal medicine Emergency medicine Geriatrics Sports medicine Thermal medicine Medical oncology Community medicine and primary care Allergy and clinical immunology Dermatology Hematology Endocrinology Food science and human nutrition Digestive system diseases Cardiovascular apparatus diseases Respiratory apparatus diseases Infectious diseases Nephrology Rheumatology Neurology Child neuropsychiatry Psychiatry Pediatrics | Class of GENERAL AND SPECIALIST SURGERY General surgery Pediatric surgery Plastic surgery Obstetrics and gynecology (OBGYN) Orthopedics Urology Maxillofacial surgery Neurosurgery Ophthalmology Otorhinolaryngology (ENT surgery) Cardiac surgery Thoracic Surgery Vascular surgery | Class of DIAGNOSTIC AND LABORATORY MEDICINE Anatomical pathology Microbiology and virology Clinical Pathology and Biochemistry Radiodiagnostics Radiotherapy Nuclear medicine Anesthesiology, critical care, and pain medicine Audiology and phoniatrics Physical medicine and rehabilitation Medical genetics Pharmacology and clinical toxicology Hygiene and preventive medicine Occupational medicine Forensic medicine Medical Statistics and Biometry Oral surgery Orthodontics Pediatric dentistry Hospital pharmacy Medical physics |
Figure A1Medical specialties chosen by past and current tutors. (a) Pie chart showing selected medical specialties by macro-areas; (b) top medical specialties chosen by tutors. Other specialties chosen by the 8% of participants included anatomical pathology, audiology and phoniatrics, food science and human nutrition, maxillofacial surgery, microbiology and virology, nephrology, occupational medicine, pediatric surgery, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and respiratory apparatus diseases.
Figure 7Word cloud of tutors’ responses to the open-ended question: “Do you feel that near-peer tutoring experience has/had positively influenced your perception towards body donation for medical education and scientific purposes?”.