1. Application of test-enhanced learning (TEL) in obstetrics and gynecology: a prospective study.
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Recker, Florian, Haverkamp, Nicolas, Mustea, Alexander, Gembruch, Ulrich, and Raupach, Tobias
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RESEARCH , *CLINICAL trials , *MEDICAL students , *RESEARCH methodology , *GYNECOLOGY , *EVALUATION research , *OBSTETRICS , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MENTAL health surveys , *CROSSOVER trials , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objective: Clinical reasoning is an essential skill, the foundations of which should be acquired during medical school. Within the format of test-based learning, such examinations can also be used to support the long-term retention of procedural knowledge necessary for clinical reasoning. The aim was to investigate whether repeated exposure to clinical cases in obstetrics and gynecology (OBGYN) with built-in questions leads to higher learning outcome than pure reading cases and what influence the delay between the intervention and the final test has on the retention of the respective content.Methods: In this non-randomised crossover study, 5th-year medical students (duration of the study is 6 years) taking a 1-week clinical attachment in OBGYN participated in computer-based case seminars in winter term 2020/2021, in which different case histories on gynecological-obstetric diseases were presented. Case content was identical for all groups, but the presentation format (cases with key feature questions vs read-only cases) of individual case vignettes changed weekly. The also intervention was repeated after 2 weeks for each group. Knowledge was assessed in an entry and an exit exam consisting of 40 short-answer questions.Results: A total of 94 out of 118 eligible students participated in the study (response rate: 79.7%). Learning outcome was significantly higher for items presented in the key feature format compared to items presented as read-only cases (74.2 ± 8.6% vs. 71.0 ± 9.2%; p = 0.017). Furthermore, the analysis showed that the temporal distance of the intervention package from the final examination had no influence on retention.Conclusion: This is the first study to demonstrate an effect of test-enhanced learning on clinical reasoning in the subject of OGBYN. In this cross-over study, repeated testing was more effective than repeated case-based learning alone. Curricular implementation of longitudinal key feature testing can thus improve learning outcomes for OBGYN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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