Medical Education - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Educational Interventions for Medical Students to Improve Pharmacological Knowledge and Prescribing Skills: A Scoping Review
    Shi, W ; Qin, H ; Vaughan, B ; Ng, L (UBIQUITY PRESS LTD, 2023)
    INTRODUCTION: Medication-related errors place a heavy financial burden on healthcare systems worldwide, and mistakes are most likely to occur at the stage of prescribing. Junior doctors are more likely to make prescribing errors, and medical graduates also lack confidence and preparedness towards prescribing. Thus, this review aimed to evaluate the existing educational approaches to improve pharmacological knowledge and prescribing skills among medical students. METHODS: CENTRAL, CINAHL, ERIC, Ovid Embase, Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid PsycINFO, and Scopus were searched with keywords related to "pharmacological knowledge", "prescribing skills", "educational interventions" for articles published since 2016. RESULTS: 3595 records were identified, and 115 full-text articles were assessed for eligibility. Eighty full-text articles were eligible and included in this review. Thirty-seven studies focused on improving prescribing skills, whilst 43 targeted pharmacological knowledge. A broad range of interventions was implemented, including e-learning, case-based, interprofessional, and experiential learning. Pharmacological knowledge and prescribing skills were measured in various ways, and all studies reported one or more positive findings at Kirkpatrick level 1 or 2. No study reported outcomes at Kirkpatrick levels 3 and 4. DISCUSSION: The World Health Organisation's Good Guide to Prescribing was the foundation of the development of prescribing educational interventions. Emerging interventions such as experiential and interprofessional learning should be incorporated into the prescribing curriculum. Innovative approaches such as game-based learning can be considered for clinical pharmacology teaching. However, there was a lack of outcomes at Kirkpatrick levels 3 and 4. Robust methodology and reliable outcome measures are also needed in future studies.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Peer teaching and Pecha Kucha for pharmacology
    Qin, H ; Vaughan, B ; Morley, P ; Ng, L (WILEY, 2022-04)
    BACKGROUND: Peer teaching involves learners at the same level in their academic career aiding each other's education. In medical education, it has had success in clinical and procedural skills; we set out to design a pharmacology peer teaching initiative and evaluate its acceptability and value as a learning tool. APPROACH: Second-year medical students (n = 62) were invited to participate in a peer-led pharmacology educational initiative over 2 months. Students created PowerPoint presentations on medications using Pecha Kucha principles (automatic slide advancement that emphasises concision through time and content limitations to sustain the audience's attention). Presentations occurred over eight, 1-hour sessions, facilitated by senior academics. EVALUATION: The evaluation consisted of an anonymous questionnaire with 10 Likert-scale questions and two open-ended questions on the learners' perceptions of feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness in improving knowledge, teaching and independent learning skills. Fifty-three students presented at well-attended sessions. Twenty-nine students completed the Kirkpatrick Level 1 evaluation with largely positive perceptions, including improved pharmacology knowledge (n = 21, 72%), teaching skills (n = 23, 79%) and independent learning skills (n = 22, 76%). Satisfaction with both the quality of peer teaching (n = 21, 72%) and presence of expert facilitators (97%, n = 28) was high. Three found the initiative burdensome, and 23 reported information overload. Nevertheless, 23 deemed the experience valuable. Facilitator reflections were also positive. IMPLICATIONS: Our peer teaching initiative appeared useful to our learners, but in this process, we gained valuable information to improve the next iteration. We plan to use this format either for revision material or reduce session length and increase interval time between sessions to address the perceived information overload.