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The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence

Background and objective Students frequently complain about the lack of practical skill learning and the poor quality of the medical school curriculum. In light of this, the purpose of this study was to assess the learning experience and subjective clinical competence of final-year medical students...

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Autores principales: Hetaimish, Bandar M, Abualross, Osamah, Alesawi, Abdulrahman, Namenkani, Mohammed, Alramadhani, Abdulaziz, Samargandi, Ramy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10321025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37416005
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.39974
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author Hetaimish, Bandar M
Abualross, Osamah
Alesawi, Abdulrahman
Namenkani, Mohammed
Alramadhani, Abdulaziz
Samargandi, Ramy
author_facet Hetaimish, Bandar M
Abualross, Osamah
Alesawi, Abdulrahman
Namenkani, Mohammed
Alramadhani, Abdulaziz
Samargandi, Ramy
author_sort Hetaimish, Bandar M
collection PubMed
description Background and objective Students frequently complain about the lack of practical skill learning and the poor quality of the medical school curriculum. In light of this, the purpose of this study was to assess the learning experience and subjective clinical competence of final-year medical students and interns in the field of orthopedics in Saudi Arabia (SA). Methods A cross-sectional observational descriptive study utilizing an electronically validated survey was conducted, which included the following six main sections: introduction, demographics, self-assessment of competency regarding certain orthopedic skills, clinical experience in orthopedics, orthopedics curriculum assessment, and choice of future career specialty. Results The total number of participants was 794. Among them, 33% (n=160) and 37.1% (180) had attended no "trauma meetings" or "operating room (OR)" sessions respectively, and only 21.9% (n=106) had attended more than five clinics. Subjective competence in history taking was highest (mean: 8.925 ±1.299) among students who had received more than four weeks of orthopedic rotation and attended more than six clinics. The students who had completed more than four weeks of orthopedic rotation and more than six bedside sessions scored the highest in terms of subjective competence in handling orthopedic patients in primary care settings (mean: 8.014 ±1.931). Conclusion The survey indicates that the amount of orthopedic training provided by institutions varies, with some students receiving less training than recommended. However, longer rotations lead to greater perceived orthopedic competence. Students and interns with more exposure to orthopedics through curriculum and elective rotations demonstrated a greater interest in pursuing orthopedics as a future career.
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spelling pubmed-103210252023-07-06 The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence Hetaimish, Bandar M Abualross, Osamah Alesawi, Abdulrahman Namenkani, Mohammed Alramadhani, Abdulaziz Samargandi, Ramy Cureus Medical Education Background and objective Students frequently complain about the lack of practical skill learning and the poor quality of the medical school curriculum. In light of this, the purpose of this study was to assess the learning experience and subjective clinical competence of final-year medical students and interns in the field of orthopedics in Saudi Arabia (SA). Methods A cross-sectional observational descriptive study utilizing an electronically validated survey was conducted, which included the following six main sections: introduction, demographics, self-assessment of competency regarding certain orthopedic skills, clinical experience in orthopedics, orthopedics curriculum assessment, and choice of future career specialty. Results The total number of participants was 794. Among them, 33% (n=160) and 37.1% (180) had attended no "trauma meetings" or "operating room (OR)" sessions respectively, and only 21.9% (n=106) had attended more than five clinics. Subjective competence in history taking was highest (mean: 8.925 ±1.299) among students who had received more than four weeks of orthopedic rotation and attended more than six clinics. The students who had completed more than four weeks of orthopedic rotation and more than six bedside sessions scored the highest in terms of subjective competence in handling orthopedic patients in primary care settings (mean: 8.014 ±1.931). Conclusion The survey indicates that the amount of orthopedic training provided by institutions varies, with some students receiving less training than recommended. However, longer rotations lead to greater perceived orthopedic competence. Students and interns with more exposure to orthopedics through curriculum and elective rotations demonstrated a greater interest in pursuing orthopedics as a future career. Cureus 2023-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10321025/ /pubmed/37416005 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.39974 Text en Copyright © 2023, Hetaimish et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Medical Education
Hetaimish, Bandar M
Abualross, Osamah
Alesawi, Abdulrahman
Namenkani, Mohammed
Alramadhani, Abdulaziz
Samargandi, Ramy
The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence
title The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence
title_full The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence
title_fullStr The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence
title_full_unstemmed The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence
title_short The Current State of Undergraduate Trauma and Orthopedics Training in Saudi Arabia: A Survey-Based Study of Sixth-Year Medical Students’ and Interns’ Learning Experience and Subjective Clinical Competence
title_sort current state of undergraduate trauma and orthopedics training in saudi arabia: a survey-based study of sixth-year medical students’ and interns’ learning experience and subjective clinical competence
topic Medical Education
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10321025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37416005
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.39974
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