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Taylor and Francis Group, Medical Teacher, 2(35), p. e957-e962

DOI: 10.3109/0142159x.2012.714887

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Acquisition of clinical competence: Added value of clerkship real-life contextual experience

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Background: Medical students' limited access to patients induces a shift of learning activities from clinical wards to classrooms. Aim: Identify clinical competencies specifically acquired during real-life contextual clerkship added to case-based tutorials, by a prospective, controlled study. Methods: Students entering our eight-week internal medicine (IM) clerkship attended paper case-based tutorials about 10 common presenting complaints and were assigned to an IM specialty ward. For each tutorial case, two groups of students were created: those assigned to a ward, the specialty of which was unrelated to the case (case-unrelated ward, CUW) and those assigned to a ward, the specialty of which was related to the case (case-related ward, CRW). Results: Forty-one students (30 CUW and 11 CRW) volunteered for the study. Both groups had similar previous experiences and pre-clerkship exam scores. The CRW students collected more relevant clinical information from the patient (69% vs. 55% of expected items, p = 0.001) and elaborated charts of better quality (47% vs. 39% of expected items, p = 0.05). Clinical-knowledge mean score was similar (70%) in both groups (p = 0.92). Conclusions: While paper-case tutorials did provide students with clinical knowledge, real contextual experience brought additional, specific competencies. This supports the preservation of clinical exposure with supervision and feedback.