How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions
It is essential that primary care physicians have a solid fund of knowledge of the diagnosis and management of common eye conditions as well as ocular emergencies, as management of these diseases commonly involves appropriate referral to an ophthalmologist. Thus, it is crucial to receive comprehensi...
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Korea Health Insurance Licensing Examination Institute
2014-11-01
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Online Access: | http://jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-11-29.pdf |
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doaj-81fda4db7ac841d184b253dc77d743402020-11-25T00:59:18ZengKorea Health Insurance Licensing Examination InstituteJournal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions1975-59372014-11-01112910.3352/jeehp.2014.11.29121How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditionsElizabeth Shanika Esparaz0S. Bruce Binder1Nicole J. Borges2Department of Internal Medicine, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Dayton, OH, USAOffice of Academic Affairs, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Dayton, OH, USAOffice of Academic Affairs, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Dayton, OH, USAIt is essential that primary care physicians have a solid fund of knowledge of the diagnosis and management of common eye conditions as well as ocular emergencies, as management of these diseases commonly involves appropriate referral to an ophthalmologist. Thus, it is crucial to receive comprehensive clinical knowledge of ophthalmic disease in the primary care setting during medical school. This study investigated how well prepared medical students are to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions. The study used scores from a standardized 12-question quiz administered to fourth-year medical students (N = 97; 88% response rate) and second-year medical students (N = 97; 97% response rate). The quiz comprising diagnosis and referral management questions covered the most frequently tested ophthalmology topics on board exams and assessed students’ ability to recognize when referral to an ophthalmologist is appropriate. Fourth-year medical students had quiz scores ranging from 0%-94.5% with an average score of 68.7%. Second-year students had quiz scores ranging from 27.2%–86.4%, with an average score of 63.8%. Passing rate was 70%. Student’s t-test showed fourth-year students had a significantly higher quiz average (P = 0.003). In general, both classes performed better on diagnostic questions (fourth-year, 73.7%; second year, 65.8%) rather than on management questions (fourth-year, 64.8%; second year, 61.8%). Both second-year and fourth-year students on average fell short on passing the ophthalmology proficiency quiz, and in general students were more adept at diagnosing rather than managing ocular conditions and emergencies.http://jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-11-29.pdfDisease management Medical students Ophthalmology Primary care Referral and consultation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Elizabeth Shanika Esparaz S. Bruce Binder Nicole J. Borges |
spellingShingle |
Elizabeth Shanika Esparaz S. Bruce Binder Nicole J. Borges How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions Disease management Medical students Ophthalmology Primary care Referral and consultation |
author_facet |
Elizabeth Shanika Esparaz S. Bruce Binder Nicole J. Borges |
author_sort |
Elizabeth Shanika Esparaz |
title |
How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions |
title_short |
How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions |
title_full |
How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions |
title_fullStr |
How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions |
title_full_unstemmed |
How prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions |
title_sort |
how prepared are medical students to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions |
publisher |
Korea Health Insurance Licensing Examination Institute |
series |
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions |
issn |
1975-5937 |
publishDate |
2014-11-01 |
description |
It is essential that primary care physicians have a solid fund of knowledge of the diagnosis and management of common eye conditions as well as ocular emergencies, as management of these diseases commonly involves appropriate referral to an ophthalmologist. Thus, it is crucial to receive comprehensive clinical knowledge of ophthalmic disease in the primary care setting during medical school. This study investigated how well prepared medical students are to diagnose and manage common ocular conditions. The study used scores from a standardized 12-question quiz administered to fourth-year medical students (N = 97; 88% response rate) and second-year medical students (N = 97; 97% response rate). The quiz comprising diagnosis and referral management questions covered the most frequently tested ophthalmology topics on board exams and assessed students’ ability to recognize when referral to an ophthalmologist is appropriate. Fourth-year medical students had quiz scores ranging from 0%-94.5% with an average score of 68.7%. Second-year students had quiz scores ranging from 27.2%–86.4%, with an average score of 63.8%. Passing rate was 70%. Student’s t-test showed fourth-year students had a significantly higher quiz average (P = 0.003). In general, both classes performed better on diagnostic questions (fourth-year, 73.7%; second year, 65.8%) rather than on management questions (fourth-year, 64.8%; second year, 61.8%). Both second-year and fourth-year students on average fell short on passing the ophthalmology proficiency quiz, and in general students were more adept at diagnosing rather than managing ocular conditions and emergencies. |
topic |
Disease management Medical students Ophthalmology Primary care Referral and consultation |
url |
http://jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-11-29.pdf |
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