Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom

Abstract Background Finnish permanent residents are covered by social security insurance administered by the Social Insurance Institution of Finland. The procedure of insurance is initiated with medical certificate written by the treating doctor. Thus, the doctor must have certificate writing skills...

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Main Authors: Nina Tusa, Erkko Sointu, Helena Kastarinen, Teemu Valtonen, Anna Kaasinen, Laura Hirsto, Markku Saarelainen, Kati Mäkitalo, Pekka Mäntyselkä
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-10-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1351-7
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spelling doaj-e41eeff5ff9f482a80325cdd12a28ce12020-11-25T02:58:04ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202018-10-011811610.1186/s12909-018-1351-7Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroomNina Tusa0Erkko Sointu1Helena Kastarinen2Teemu Valtonen3Anna Kaasinen4Laura Hirsto5Markku Saarelainen6Kati Mäkitalo7Pekka Mäntyselkä8Institute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition, University of Eastern FinlandSchool of Educational Sciences and Psychology, University of Eastern FinlandSocial Insurance Institution of FinlandSchool of Applied Educational Sciences and Teacher Education, University of Eastern FinlandDepartment of Applied Physics, University of Eastern FinlandSchool of Applied Educational Sciences and Teacher Education, University of Eastern FinlandDepartment of Applied Physics, University of Eastern FinlandFaculty of Education, University of OuluInstitute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition, University of Eastern FinlandAbstract Background Finnish permanent residents are covered by social security insurance administered by the Social Insurance Institution of Finland. The procedure of insurance is initiated with medical certificate written by the treating doctor. Thus, the doctor must have certificate writing skills accompanied with the knowledge of the content and goals for insurance. Quality certificates are important part of doctors’ professional skills worldwide and most effective teaching methods for learning these should be investigated. Methods Medical certificate data were collected from two independent courses of fourth-year student taught in autumn 2015 (N = 141) and 2016 (N = 142) in the medical faculty of the University of Eastern Finland. A random sample of 40 students per course was drawn for the analysis. All certificates were analyzed as one sample. This was done to obtain reliable results with internal control group on the differences between two teaching methods, the traditional approach and the flipped classroom (FC) approach, in 2015 and 2016, respectively. The medical certificates were evaluated and scored with a rubric (range: − 4.00–14.25) by two independent experienced specialists. Results Compared to students in the traditional classroom, students involved in the FC received significantly higher scores in all relevant sections of the assessed certificates. The mean of the total scores was 8.87 (SD = 1.70) for the traditional group and 10.97 (SD = 1.25) for the FC group. Based on the common language effect size, a randomly selected student from the FC group had an 85% probability of receiving a higher total score than a student from the traditional group. Conclusion In this study, the FC approach resulted in a statistical significant improvement in the content and technical quality of the certificates. The results suggest that the FC approach can be applied in the teaching of medical certificate writing.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1351-7Flipped classroomLecture-based learningMedical educationMedical certificate educationQuantitative research methods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Tusa
Erkko Sointu
Helena Kastarinen
Teemu Valtonen
Anna Kaasinen
Laura Hirsto
Markku Saarelainen
Kati Mäkitalo
Pekka Mäntyselkä
spellingShingle Nina Tusa
Erkko Sointu
Helena Kastarinen
Teemu Valtonen
Anna Kaasinen
Laura Hirsto
Markku Saarelainen
Kati Mäkitalo
Pekka Mäntyselkä
Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
BMC Medical Education
Flipped classroom
Lecture-based learning
Medical education
Medical certificate education
Quantitative research methods
author_facet Nina Tusa
Erkko Sointu
Helena Kastarinen
Teemu Valtonen
Anna Kaasinen
Laura Hirsto
Markku Saarelainen
Kati Mäkitalo
Pekka Mäntyselkä
author_sort Nina Tusa
title Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
title_short Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
title_full Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
title_fullStr Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
title_full_unstemmed Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
title_sort medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Abstract Background Finnish permanent residents are covered by social security insurance administered by the Social Insurance Institution of Finland. The procedure of insurance is initiated with medical certificate written by the treating doctor. Thus, the doctor must have certificate writing skills accompanied with the knowledge of the content and goals for insurance. Quality certificates are important part of doctors’ professional skills worldwide and most effective teaching methods for learning these should be investigated. Methods Medical certificate data were collected from two independent courses of fourth-year student taught in autumn 2015 (N = 141) and 2016 (N = 142) in the medical faculty of the University of Eastern Finland. A random sample of 40 students per course was drawn for the analysis. All certificates were analyzed as one sample. This was done to obtain reliable results with internal control group on the differences between two teaching methods, the traditional approach and the flipped classroom (FC) approach, in 2015 and 2016, respectively. The medical certificates were evaluated and scored with a rubric (range: − 4.00–14.25) by two independent experienced specialists. Results Compared to students in the traditional classroom, students involved in the FC received significantly higher scores in all relevant sections of the assessed certificates. The mean of the total scores was 8.87 (SD = 1.70) for the traditional group and 10.97 (SD = 1.25) for the FC group. Based on the common language effect size, a randomly selected student from the FC group had an 85% probability of receiving a higher total score than a student from the traditional group. Conclusion In this study, the FC approach resulted in a statistical significant improvement in the content and technical quality of the certificates. The results suggest that the FC approach can be applied in the teaching of medical certificate writing.
topic Flipped classroom
Lecture-based learning
Medical education
Medical certificate education
Quantitative research methods
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1351-7
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