Conocimiento de anatomía en estudiantes de medicina veterinaria en Chile
Author(s) -
Juan Claudio Gutierrez,
Marcelo Gómez,
Gabriela Sudel,
Mary Renee Prater
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
investigación en educación médica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2007-865X
pISSN - 2007-5057
DOI - 10.1016/j.riem.2016.04.004
Subject(s) - cornerstone , medical education , medical knowledge , dissection (medical) , medicine , psychology , veterinary medicine , anatomy , art , visual arts
Anatomy is considered a cornerstone in human and veterinary medical education, as this basic science discipline provides a vital foundation on which to build the knowledge of the clinical practice of medicine.ObjectiveThe aims of this study were: 1) to collect information on first year veterinary student preference, and use of supportive educational tools, and 2) to assess long-term knowledge retention in senior veterinary students who successfully completed the bovine anatomy course.MethodA survey was administered to first-year veterinary students in order to identify their learning tools of choice, and a diagnostic examination was designed to reflect highly relevant basic anatomy knowledge was administered to senior veterinary students.ResultsBesides the regular cadaver-dissection laboratories, textbooks were the tool used most frequently by first-year students to learn bovine anatomy. Computer technology was used by only 12.2% of the students. When evaluating knowledge retention of bovine anatomy by fourth year (senior) students, only 33.2% of the questions were answered correctly in the fourth year examination.ConclusionsThese results were interpreted as a low long-term retention of knowledge in Chilean veterinary medical students
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