Medical Education Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Use of Hybrid Simulation (HS) of the Breast in Teaching Clinical Breast Examination (CBE) to Medical Students.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the use of hybrid simulation of the breast are more effective in teaching CBE technique and culturally sensitive doctor-patient communication skills to medical students than the traditional method.
Breast cancer is a Lebanese national problem. Campaigns for mammography screening are
effective but recommendations on breast examinations screening for breast tumors are
lacking. On one hand, the Lebanese population is culturally diverse, with women's beliefs
ranging from liberal to extremely conservative. On the other hand, Clinical Breast
Examination (CBE) is traditionally taught to medicine III students in a lecture, followed by
practice on a low-fidelity breast model. The opportunity to clinically practice CBE depends
on patient availability and her willingness to be examined by students. This is further
limited by some Lebanese women's cultural and religious beliefs. Little is known about the
effect of patient cultural practices on the efficacy of CBE.
In this project, we focus on the need for an effective educational tool for teaching CBE to
physicians-in-training. The proposed teaching method in this study is hybrid simulation:
breast model jacket (simulator) worn by a trained actress (standardized patient, SP). In
this study, we compare this standardized educational tool to the traditional teaching method
which consists of a lecture and training on a low-fidelity (unrealistic) breast model on a
desk (no SP).
We hypothesize that the use of this hybrid simulation tool, as compared to the traditional
teaching method, will result in a more complete CBE, better lesion detection and improved
culturally sensitive communication skills in terms of awareness of, and ability to deal
with, cultural differences related to breast examination.
In order to do so, we will evaluate medical students' performance and examine their
attitudes and cultural competencies when they perform CBEs on 3 culturally different
standardized patients using hybrid simulation scenarios. Through an experimental design that
minimizes biases related to selection of students (randomized controlled), we will compare
hybrid simulation (intervention) with low-fidelity simulation (control) in teaching CBE.
Medicine-III students rotating in the Obstetrics and Gynecology department at the American
University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC) will be asked to participate; they are free to
refuse without any effect on their grades in the rotation. The students will be assessed in
an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) setting similar to their usual oral
clinical exams but not contributory to their academic evaluation in the Faculty of Medicine.
The OSCE setting will include encounters with 3 culturally different Standardized Patients
(1 "outgoing" woman, 1 with "chador", and 1 moderately conservative woman). The assessment
tools are questionnaires that are either objective (filled by SP) or self-reporting (filled
by students) about (1) met learning objectives, (2) student's attitude, and (3) clinical
cultural competency.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor)
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