A Hypothesis-Driven, Near-Peer Physical Diagnosis Module on Streptococcal Pharyngitis Within the Pediatrics Clerkship.
Humans
Pediatrics
/ education
Pharyngitis
/ diagnosis
Clinical Clerkship
/ methods
Physical Examination
/ methods
Clinical Competence
Streptococcal Infections
/ diagnosis
Peer Group
Educational Measurement
/ methods
Surveys and Questionnaires
Students, Medical
/ statistics & numerical data
Curriculum
Clinical Skills Assessment/OSCEs
Clinical Teaching/Bedside Teaching
Clinical/Procedural Skills Training
Near-Peer Learning
Pediatrics
Physical Diagnosis
Physical Examination
Residents as Teachers
Journal
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources
ISSN: 2374-8265
Titre abrégé: MedEdPORTAL
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101714390
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
2024
2024
Historique:
received:
04
01
2024
accepted:
09
05
2024
medline:
7
10
2024
pubmed:
7
10
2024
entrez:
7
10
2024
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
In busy clinical settings, there is limited time to teach physical examination (PE) and procedural skills, particularly when the traditional head-to-toe PE approach is time-consuming. Near-peer teaching of a more efficient approach, the hypothesis-driven PE (HDPE), increases students' learning opportunities. We developed a near-peer HDPE module to improve medical student confidence, knowledge, and skills for diagnosing and managing streptococcal pharyngitis. During this 1-hour module, residents taught the diagnostic approach for a patient with sore throat and facilitated small groups for practicing PE and throat swab skills. We assessed students using pre- and postmodule surveys including Likert-scale confidence scores (1 = Of the 71 pediatric clerkship students who participated, 69 (97%) completed premodule surveys and 65 (91%) completed skills assessments. Twenty-eight (39%) completed postmodule surveys and skill assessments. After participation, students' survey responses and rubrics indicated significant increase in confidence ( This near-peer HDPE module improved students' knowledge, confidence, and skills related to streptococcal pharyngitis diagnosis and management and achieved compliance for a required clerkship skill.
Identifiants
pubmed: 39371525
doi: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11448
pii: 11448
pmc: PMC11450068
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
11448Informations de copyright
© 2024 Podraza et al.