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Feedback in formative OSCEs: comparison between direct observation and video-based formats

Authors :
Johanna Sommer
Eva Pfarrwaller
Martine Louis-Simonet
Noëlle Junod Perron
Bernard Cerutti
Mathieu Nendaz
Source :
Medical Education Online; Vol 21 (2016), Medical Education Online, Vol 21, Iss 0, Pp 1-6 (2016), Medical Education, Medical Education Online, Vol. 21 (2016) P. 32160
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Co-Action Publishing, 2016.

Abstract

Introduction : Medical students at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland, have the opportunity to practice clinical skills with simulated patients during formative sessions in preparation for clerkships. These sessions are given in two formats: 1) direct observation of an encounter followed by verbal feedback (direct feedback) and 2) subsequent review of the videotaped encounter by both student and supervisor (video-based feedback). The aim of the study was to evaluate whether content and process of feedback differed between both formats. Methods : In 2013, all second- and third-year medical students and clinical supervisors involved in formative sessions were asked to take part in the study. A sample of audiotaped feedback sessions involving supervisors who gave feedback in both formats were analyzed (content and process of the feedback) using a 21-item feedback scale. Results : Forty-eight audiotaped feedback sessions involving 12 supervisors were analyzed (2 direct and 2 video-based sessions per supervisor). When adjusted for the length of feedback, there were significant differences in terms of content and process between both formats; the number of communication skills and clinical reasoning items addressed were higher in the video-based format (11.29 vs. 7.71, p= 0.002 and 3.71 vs. 2.04, p= 0.010, respectively). Supervisors engaged students more actively during the video-based sessions than during direct feedback sessions (self-assessment: 4.00 vs. 3.17, p= 0.007; active problem-solving: 3.92 vs. 3.42, p= 0.009). Students made similar observations and tended to consider that the video feedback was more useful for improving some clinical skills. Conclusion : Video-based feedback facilitates discussion of clinical reasoning, communication, and professionalism issues while at the same time actively engaging students. Different time and conceptual frameworks may explain observed differences. The choice of feedback format should depend on the educational goal. Keywords: formative; OSCEs; feedback; quality; video review; direct observation (Published: 8 November 2016) Citation: Med Educ Online 2016, 21: 32160 - http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/meo.v21.32160

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10872981
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical Education Online
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1e4e7747491636164855da2338ebf54f