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Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures

BACKGROUND: For more than 20 years, medical literature has increasingly documented the need for students to learn, practice and demonstrate competence in basic clinical knowledge and skills. In 2001, the Louisiana State University Health Science Centers (LSUHSC) School of Medicine – New Orleans repl...

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Autores principales: Lofaso, Daryl P., DeBlieux, Peter M., DiCarlo, Richard P., Hilton, Charles, Yang, Tong, Chauvin, Sheila W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Co-Action Publishing 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3234100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22190848
http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/meo.v16i0.7132
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author Lofaso, Daryl P.
DeBlieux, Peter M.
DiCarlo, Richard P.
Hilton, Charles
Yang, Tong
Chauvin, Sheila W.
author_facet Lofaso, Daryl P.
DeBlieux, Peter M.
DiCarlo, Richard P.
Hilton, Charles
Yang, Tong
Chauvin, Sheila W.
author_sort Lofaso, Daryl P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: For more than 20 years, medical literature has increasingly documented the need for students to learn, practice and demonstrate competence in basic clinical knowledge and skills. In 2001, the Louisiana State University Health Science Centers (LSUHSC) School of Medicine – New Orleans replaced its traditional Introduction in to Clinical Medicine (ICM) course with the Science and Practice of Medicine (SPM) course. The main component within the SPM course is the Clinical Skills Lab (CSL). The CSL teaches 30 plus skills to all pre-clinical medical students (Years 1 and 2). METHODS: Since 2002, an annual longitudinal evaluation questionnaire was distributed to all medical students targeting the skills taught in the CSL. Students were asked to rate their self- confidence (Dreyfus and Likert-type) and estimate the number of times each clinical skill was performed (clinically/non-clinically). Of the 30 plus skills taught, 8 were selected for further evaluation. RESULTS: An analysis was performed on the eight skills selected to determine the effectiveness of the CSL. All students that participated in the CSL reported a significant improvement in self-confidence and in number performed in the clinically/non-clinically setting when compared to students that did not experience the CSL. For example, without CSL training, the percentage of students reported at the end of their second year self-perceived expertise as “novice” ranged from 21.4% (CPR) to 84.7% (GU catheterization). Students who completed the two-years CSL, only 7.8% rated their self-perceived expertise at the end of the second year as “novice” and 18.8% for GU catheterization. CONCLUSION: The CSL design is not to replace real clinical patient experiences. It's to provide early exposure, medial knowledge, professionalism and opportunity to practice skills in a patient free environment.
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spelling pubmed-32341002011-12-21 Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures Lofaso, Daryl P. DeBlieux, Peter M. DiCarlo, Richard P. Hilton, Charles Yang, Tong Chauvin, Sheila W. Med Educ Online Performance Assessment BACKGROUND: For more than 20 years, medical literature has increasingly documented the need for students to learn, practice and demonstrate competence in basic clinical knowledge and skills. In 2001, the Louisiana State University Health Science Centers (LSUHSC) School of Medicine – New Orleans replaced its traditional Introduction in to Clinical Medicine (ICM) course with the Science and Practice of Medicine (SPM) course. The main component within the SPM course is the Clinical Skills Lab (CSL). The CSL teaches 30 plus skills to all pre-clinical medical students (Years 1 and 2). METHODS: Since 2002, an annual longitudinal evaluation questionnaire was distributed to all medical students targeting the skills taught in the CSL. Students were asked to rate their self- confidence (Dreyfus and Likert-type) and estimate the number of times each clinical skill was performed (clinically/non-clinically). Of the 30 plus skills taught, 8 were selected for further evaluation. RESULTS: An analysis was performed on the eight skills selected to determine the effectiveness of the CSL. All students that participated in the CSL reported a significant improvement in self-confidence and in number performed in the clinically/non-clinically setting when compared to students that did not experience the CSL. For example, without CSL training, the percentage of students reported at the end of their second year self-perceived expertise as “novice” ranged from 21.4% (CPR) to 84.7% (GU catheterization). Students who completed the two-years CSL, only 7.8% rated their self-perceived expertise at the end of the second year as “novice” and 18.8% for GU catheterization. CONCLUSION: The CSL design is not to replace real clinical patient experiences. It's to provide early exposure, medial knowledge, professionalism and opportunity to practice skills in a patient free environment. Co-Action Publishing 2011-12-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3234100/ /pubmed/22190848 http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/meo.v16i0.7132 Text en © 2011 Daryl P. Lofaso et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Performance Assessment
Lofaso, Daryl P.
DeBlieux, Peter M.
DiCarlo, Richard P.
Hilton, Charles
Yang, Tong
Chauvin, Sheila W.
Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures
title Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures
title_full Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures
title_fullStr Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures
title_full_unstemmed Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures
title_short Design and Effectiveness of a Required Pre-Clinical Simulation-based Curriculum for Fundamental Clinical Skills and Procedures
title_sort design and effectiveness of a required pre-clinical simulation-based curriculum for fundamental clinical skills and procedures
topic Performance Assessment
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3234100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22190848
http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/meo.v16i0.7132
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