BMC Medical Education (Jan 2018)

Do senior medical students meet recommended emergency medicine curricula requirements?

  • Sami Shaban,
  • Arif Alper Cevik,
  • Mustafa Emin Canakci,
  • Caglar Kuas,
  • Margret El Zubeir,
  • Fikri Abu-Zidan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-017-1110-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Emergency departments (EDs) offer a variety of learning opportunities for undergraduate medical students. It is however, difficult to evaluate whether they are receiving recommended training during their emergency medicine (EM) clerkship without identifying their clinical activities. We aimed to evaluate the clinical exposure of the final year medical students at our College during their EM clerkship. Methods This is a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected student logbooks. 75 students rotated in a 4-week EM clerkship during 2015–2016. The students rotated in EDs of two hospitals. Each ED treats more than 120,000 cases annually. The students completed 12 eight-hours shifts. Presentations and procedures seen were compared with EM curriculum recommendations. Results Five thousand one hundred twenty-two patient presentations and 3246 procedures were recorded in the logbooks, an average (SD) of 68.3 (17.6) patients and 46.1 (14.0) procedures. None of the students encountered all ten recommended presentations. Two students (2.6%) logged all nine procedure categories of the EM curriculum. Conclusion Recommended presentations and procedures of the EM clerkship were not fully encountered by all our students. Different settings vary in the availability and type of patients and procedures. Each clinical clerkship should tailor their teaching methods based on the available learning opportunities.

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