Author:
Xu Lingling,Liu Wangkai,Jiang Xiaoyun,Li Yijuan
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of peer role-playing on the clinical skills performance of pediatric trainees.
Methods
Seventy-eight clinical medicine trainees were randomly divided into a role-playing group and a traditional teaching group, with 39 students in each group. The role-playing group alternated between the roles of clinicians and patients, while the traditional teaching group received the bedside teaching mode of verbal instruction. After two weeks traineeship, mini-Clinical Evaluation Exercise(Mini-CEX) was used to evaluate the trainees’ competence in physician-patient communication and clinical practice. A questionnaire was given to the role-playing group to assess their satisfaction with the method.
Results
The Mini-CEX scores showed that the role-playing group had superior clinical skills (p < 0.05), including communication, history taking, professionalism, organization, clinical skills, and physical examination, compared to the traditional teaching group. Furthermore, trainee satisfaction was high with the role-playing method,and the satisfaction were more than 95%.
Conclusion
The role-playing method effectively improved the clinical skills of pediatric trainees, developed clinical communication skills, and enhanced the application of medical knowledge in a simulated medical environment.
Funder
Sun Yat-sen University, university-level undergraduate Teaching reform research project
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Education,General Medicine
Cited by
3 articles.
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