Premium
Evaluation of a pharmacotherapy context‐learning programme for preclinical medical students
Author(s) -
Vollebregt J. A.,
Van Oldenrijk J.,
Kox D.,
Van Galen S. R.,
Sturm B.,
Metz J. C. M.,
Richir M. C.,
De Haan M.,
Hugtenburg J. G.,
De Vries T. P. G. M.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
british journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.216
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1365-2125
pISSN - 0306-5251
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2006.02742.x
Subject(s) - pharmacotherapy , context (archaeology) , medicine , pharmacology , medical physics , medical education , biology , paleontology
What is already known about this subject • Context‐learning in medicine is mainly based on theories explaining how medical expertise is achieved, particularly with regard to diagnostic problem solving. • By frequently solving diagnostic clinical problems doctors generate so‐called networks of organized knowledge in their memory. • Preclinical medical students are well able to learn to choose and prescribe drugs. What this study adds • Preclinical pharmacotherapy context learning for medical students has a modest but positive effect on learning cognitive pharmacotherapeutic skills, i.e. choosing a drug treatment and determining patient information. • The effect can be obtained with role‐play sessions, a suboptimal form of context learning, with a minimal study load and a high appreciation by students. Aim To evaluate a context‐learning pharmacotherapy programme for approximately 750 2nd, 3rd and 4th year preclinical medical students with respect to mastering cognitive pharmacotherapeutic skills, i.e. choosing a (drug) treatment and determining patient information. Methods The context‐learning pharmacotherapy programme consists of weekly organized role play sessions in the form of consulting hours. Fourth year students sit for a therapeutic Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) in the form of consulting hours at the outpatient clinic. Sixty‐one 2nd, 74 3rd and 49 4th year medical students who attended the role play sessions and the OSCE were randomly selected. Their performances were assessed by clinical examiners and clinical experts and compared with a reference group of 6th year graduated students. Additionally, the scores of a questionnaire on study load and appreciation were collected. Results The level of the pharmacotherapeutic skills of the 4th year students who followed the pharmacotherapy context‐learning programme was not far below that of 6th year graduates who had finished their clinical clerkships, but had not followed the pharmacotherapy programme. The time spent on the programme was about 1% of the total study load per year. The students appreciated the role play sessions and OSCE by around 80% and 99% of the maximum possible scores. Conclusions Preclinical pharmacotherapy context learning has a modest but positive effect on learning cognitive pharmacotherapeutic skills, i.e. choosing a drug treatment and determining patient information. This effect has been obtained with role play sessions, a suboptimal form of context learning, with a minimal study load and a high appreciation by students.