Engaging Premedical Students in Medical Education Research: Benefits of Clinical Skills Observation Studies

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Abstract

Purpose Observations requiring evaluation and critical thinking can be powerful learning experiences. Video-recorded standardized patient encounters are underused resources for evaluation and research. The authors engaged premedical students in medical education research reviewing standardized patient encounters. This study aims to explore participant perceptions of the research experience and how they gained clinical skills. Method This mixed-method study was completed between 2019 and 2022. Premedical participants coded medical students' clinical skills in video-recorded standardized patient encounters. Each participant also completed their own new patient history in a standardized patient encounter at both the beginning and end of their research project. Participants then completed an end-of-program debrief to discuss their experiences coding the clinical skills encounters. The authors coded communication skills implemented in the pre/postencounters and completed a thematic analysis of the debrief transcripts. Results All 21 participants demonstrated significant clinical skills gain after their research project, which included spending more time with the patient (pre-M=5 minutes, post-M=19 minutes, t=13.2, P

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APA

Weingartner, L. A., Noonan, E. J., Shaw, M. A., & Fuselier, L. (2023). Engaging Premedical Students in Medical Education Research: Benefits of Clinical Skills Observation Studies. In Academic Medicine (Vol. 98, pp. S157–S164). Wolters Kluwer Health. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000005361

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