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Educational Techniques clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06164158 Completed - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

Role of Procedural Videos in Teaching the Surgery Residents

Start date: September 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized controlled trial was conducted at Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) Islamabad after approval from the Institutional ethics review board. Fifty-four surgical residents in training and who have completed at least 3 months of surgical training were enrolled in the study. After the residents had performed the procedure initially, 27 were made to watch the procedural videos and learn the steps of the procedure while those of the other group did not watch the videos. Participants of both the groups were made to perform the procedure. GARS (global assessment rating score) was calculated for each individual during their second procedure. All procedures were performed under the supervision of a consultant surgeon who was blinded about the groups and make assessment of the GARS (global assessment rating score).

NCT ID: NCT04114812 Completed - Ultrasonography Clinical Trials

Near-peer Tutoring Compared With a Standard Faculty-led Course for Undergraduate Training in Abdominal Ultrasound.

SIGNATURE
Start date: September 17, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Ultrasound has become clinical skill widely used in most medical disciplines. Institutions are changing their curricula to implementing basic ultrasound knowledge, often supplementing traditional teaching with 'near-peer' tutoring through classes held by advanced peers. Near-peer tutoring has been found to be both effective and cost-effective. In Switzerland the most popular course in postgraduate training is a resource-intensive 21-hour basic course for abdominal ultrasound. However, this is expensive, and may not be the best way to impart these skills to undergraduates, who need training more adapted to their needs. Therefore a 21-hour blended-learning ultrasound course, comprising 5 hours of e-learning and 16 hours of near-peer tutoring has been developped. Students and their near-peer tutors autonomously organize individual practical teaching sessions within a 16 weeks time period. Methods: Medical students from second to fourth year at the Universities of Bern, Fribourg and Zurich will be included. Stratified by study site, students will be randomized to one of the two interventions. The blended-learning group will receive e-learning and near-peer tutoring over 16 weeks; the other group will receive 21 hours of teaching, from ultrasound experts, in a 2.5-day course. All participants will undergo a six-station OSCE directly after the course and 6 months later. Students will fill out online questionnaires at baseline, directly after the course and 6 months later. The mean scores of both groups will be compared at six months after the end of both courses. Secondary outcome measures will be students' ultrasound skills immediately after the courses, student satisfaction, multivariate regression exploring factors that affect outcome at 6 months and exploratory subgroup analysis. Discussion: This study is designed to compare the current way of ultrasound education in Switzerland with a new blended learning course. It aims to determine whether the blended learning course is as good as, or better than the existing 21-hour standard course. If this is found to be the case, blended learning could help to expand capacity to offer such courses to undergraduate medical students. It would eventually allow undergraduate Swiss medical students to acquire ultrasound skills before starting their residencies. This study also aims at improving the understanding of how to achieve effective student-centred learning supported by near-peer tutoring.

NCT ID: NCT03722810 Completed - Clinical trials for Educational Techniques

The Effect of a Structured, Home-based Interview With a Patient on First-year Medical Students' Patient-centredness.

Start date: September 28, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background Doctors are regarded as professionals, and specific teaching on professional behaviour is considered important in many countries. For medical students, early patient contact experiences were found to be an important way of learning about professionalism, and learning activities promoting critical reflection were particularly effective. Medical students consider that patient-centredness is one of the most important aspects of medical professionalism, and the PPOS questionnaire has been used extensively in measuring the attitudes of medical students towards patient-centredness. The PPOS-D12 questionnaire is a validated German version of that questionnaire. The study aim is to assess how a structured, in-depth, home-based interview with a patient with a chronic illness affects first-year medical students' patient-centredness. Methods In this randomised controlled trial, medical students who are in the first year of their studies at the University of Bern will be randomised to either seeing a patient with a chronic illness for a structured, in-depth interview in their own home (the intervention), or to reading an educational document that gives information about consultation skills (the sham comparator). Students will complete the PPOS-D12 survey before and after the interventions, so that changes in their scores can be calculated, and the mean scores of the two groups compared. Secondary outcomes will be the effect of students' gender and prior exposure to chronic illness in the participant or her/his close relatives and friends on their PPOS-D12 scores. A nested study will measure the strength of association between the GP teachers' own levels of patient/doctor-centredness and changes in their students' levels over the year. Discussion This research will consider the effect of an in-depth, structured interview with a patient with a chronic illness on changes in first-year medical students' levels of patient-centredness. There is existing evidence that medical students' levels of patient-centredness reduce over their student years, and this study will contribute to an understanding of how this reduction can be minimised or reversed.