1. An Evaluation of the Effectiveness of a Medical School Musculoskeletal Curriculum at an Academic Medical Center
- Author
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Andy Lalka, Ryan Caldwell, Andrew Black, and Frank A Scott
- Subjects
Program Evaluation ,Musculoskeletal Education ,Quality Assurance ,Student Assessment ,Education ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Theory and practice of education ,LB5-3640 - Abstract
Background: Musculoskeletal disorders are common medical problems encountered by physicians and affected 126.6 million Americans in 2012. Musculoskeletal education has inadequate in United States medical schools. Objective: To determine the musculoskeletal competency of third year medical students. Methods: A cross-sectional 25-question nationally validated musculoskeletal competency exam was given to the third year medical students. A survey was given to second and third year medical students to assess students’ level of interest in musculoskeletal medicine and their feedback regarding the curriculum. Results: The mean score of the competency exam was 69.0%. There was 48/107 (44.9%) students’ who reached the minimum passing score of 70%. Free-response feedback from both classes featured themes of more hands-on learning, a longer clinical block, and more small-group learning sessions. Conclusions: Third year medical students scored relatively well on the exam. Student feedback suggests the 2-week musculoskeletal block is useful and relevant to their future careers.
- Published
- 2018
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