Teaching clinical skills to pre-clinical medical students: integration with basic science learning |
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Authors: | S. DUBAN S. MENNIN R. WATERMAN SUSAN LUCERO ALLISON STUBBS C. VANDERWAGEN A. KAUFMAN |
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Affiliation: | Departments of Paediatrics, Anatomy and Family, Community and Emergency Medicine and the Primary Care Curriculum, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Clinical skills are usually learned by pre-clinical students in a manner divorced from their basic science foundations. The value of previously learned basic sciences thus fails to be re-enforced. A clinical skills course was developed for an experimental curriculum of medical students in their first year. It was organized and taught by a team of basic and clinical scientists and emphasized the basic pathophysiological principles underlying clinical skills. Sessions were supported by related basic science audiovisual resources and a series of clinical problems with questions obliging the student to reason through basic-science mechanisms. Over the span of the course, Students' interest shifted dramatically from a focus on proficiency in motor skills to an understanding of basic pathophysiological mechanisms underlying observed phenomena. Compared to conventional curriculum students, those in the experimental curriculum failed to show a diminution in perceived value of basic sciences in their future career and, on cumulative, cognitive examinations, scored equally in basic science, but significantly higher in clinical science subjects. A clinical skills course integrating both teachers and concepts from basic, as well as clinical sciences can improve student attitudes toward the basic sciences. |
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Keywords: | *Clinical skills * Education medical, undergraduate Teaching/*methods *Science Curriculum New Mexico |
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