Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey

Background: The purpose of this study was twofold: to assess the status of undergraduate medical ultrasound (US) education in the German-speaking area and to suggest a possible framework for a longitudinal undergraduate medical US curriculum based on the study results and a literature review.Methods...

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Main Authors: Wolf, Robert, Geuthel, Nicole, Gnatzy, Franziska, Rotzoll, Daisy
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2019-08-01
Series:GMS Journal for Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/zma/2019-36/zma001242.shtml
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spelling doaj-de7f2cf09045428abd31a470d4895b122020-11-25T02:21:00ZdeuGerman Medical Science GMS Publishing HouseGMS Journal for Medical Education2366-50172019-08-01364Doc3410.3205/zma001242Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a surveyWolf, Robert0Geuthel, Nicole1Gnatzy, Franziska2Rotzoll, Daisy3University of Leipzig, Faculty of Medicine, Skills and Simulation Centre LernKlinik Leipzig, Leipzig, GermanyUniversity Hospital Leipzig, Department of Paediatrics, Clinic for Paediatric Surgery, Leipzig, GermanySt. Elisabeth Hospital Leipzig, Clinic for Internal Medicine II, Leipzig, GermanyUniversity of Leipzig, Faculty of Medicine, Skills and Simulation Centre LernKlinik Leipzig, Leipzig, GermanyBackground: The purpose of this study was twofold: to assess the status of undergraduate medical ultrasound (US) education in the German-speaking area and to suggest a possible framework for a longitudinal undergraduate medical US curriculum based on the study results and a literature review.Methods: The survey included 44 medical faculties in the German-speaking area: 37 in Germany, four in Austria and three in German-speaking Switzerland. A standardized questionnaire focused on the following aspects of undergraduate medical US education: general information, organization, resources, assessment methods and evaluation. Results: Data from 28 medical faculties were analysed. 26 out of 28 medical faculties offered US courses, 21 offered compulsory as well as elective courses, four offered compulsory and one elective courses only. 27 medical faculties supported US skills implementation. Abdominal US (n=25) was most common in teaching basic US skills. A learning objective catalogue was provided at 15 medical faculties. At 22 medical faculties, medical specialists were involved in undergraduate medical US education. 24 out of 26 medical faculties thought that peer-teaching is important to convey US skills. Medical faculties used the following methods to assess US skills: objective structured clinical examination (OSCE, n=7), non-standardized practical exams (n=4), non-standardized combined oral-practical exams (n=2) or direct observation of procedural skills (DOPS, n=1). 25 out of 26 medical faculties evaluated their US courses and 19 made suggestions for improvements in undergraduate medical US education.Conclusion: Medical faculty members in the German-speaking area have recognized the relevance of undergraduate medical US education. So far, courses are offered heterogeneously with rather short hands-on scanning time and high student-instructor ratio. Based on the results of this study and a literature review we suggest a possible framework and milestones on the way to a longitudinal undergraduate medical US curriculum.http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/zma/2019-36/zma001242.shtmlclinical skillsultrasound educationmedical studentscurriculum developmentpeer-teaching
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wolf, Robert
Geuthel, Nicole
Gnatzy, Franziska
Rotzoll, Daisy
spellingShingle Wolf, Robert
Geuthel, Nicole
Gnatzy, Franziska
Rotzoll, Daisy
Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey
GMS Journal for Medical Education
clinical skills
ultrasound education
medical students
curriculum development
peer-teaching
author_facet Wolf, Robert
Geuthel, Nicole
Gnatzy, Franziska
Rotzoll, Daisy
author_sort Wolf, Robert
title Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey
title_short Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey
title_full Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey
title_fullStr Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey
title_full_unstemmed Undergraduate ultrasound education at German-speaking medical faculties: a survey
title_sort undergraduate ultrasound education at german-speaking medical faculties: a survey
publisher German Medical Science GMS Publishing House
series GMS Journal for Medical Education
issn 2366-5017
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Background: The purpose of this study was twofold: to assess the status of undergraduate medical ultrasound (US) education in the German-speaking area and to suggest a possible framework for a longitudinal undergraduate medical US curriculum based on the study results and a literature review.Methods: The survey included 44 medical faculties in the German-speaking area: 37 in Germany, four in Austria and three in German-speaking Switzerland. A standardized questionnaire focused on the following aspects of undergraduate medical US education: general information, organization, resources, assessment methods and evaluation. Results: Data from 28 medical faculties were analysed. 26 out of 28 medical faculties offered US courses, 21 offered compulsory as well as elective courses, four offered compulsory and one elective courses only. 27 medical faculties supported US skills implementation. Abdominal US (n=25) was most common in teaching basic US skills. A learning objective catalogue was provided at 15 medical faculties. At 22 medical faculties, medical specialists were involved in undergraduate medical US education. 24 out of 26 medical faculties thought that peer-teaching is important to convey US skills. Medical faculties used the following methods to assess US skills: objective structured clinical examination (OSCE, n=7), non-standardized practical exams (n=4), non-standardized combined oral-practical exams (n=2) or direct observation of procedural skills (DOPS, n=1). 25 out of 26 medical faculties evaluated their US courses and 19 made suggestions for improvements in undergraduate medical US education.Conclusion: Medical faculty members in the German-speaking area have recognized the relevance of undergraduate medical US education. So far, courses are offered heterogeneously with rather short hands-on scanning time and high student-instructor ratio. Based on the results of this study and a literature review we suggest a possible framework and milestones on the way to a longitudinal undergraduate medical US curriculum.
topic clinical skills
ultrasound education
medical students
curriculum development
peer-teaching
url http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/zma/2019-36/zma001242.shtml
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AT rotzolldaisy undergraduateultrasoundeducationatgermanspeakingmedicalfacultiesasurvey
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