The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine (Jan 2022)

Teaching radiology in Egyptian medical schools: Where do we stand and how can we start?

  • Mohamed Badawy,
  • Scott Rohren,
  • Ahmed Elhatw,
  • Ahmed S. Negm,
  • Amr Ahmed,
  • Islam Khalifa,
  • Mostafa Ahmed Shehata,
  • Yara ElHefnawi,
  • Florentino Saenz,
  • Serageldin Kamel,
  • Mariam Ahmed Saad,
  • Mohamed Ismael Fahmy,
  • Sammar Ghannam,
  • Abdelrahman Abusaif,
  • Mohamed Yasser Hussein,
  • Mariam Elbatal,
  • Nada Shalaby,
  • Mahmoud F. Hammad,
  • Amany Elfeel,
  • Ferial Choucair,
  • Parth Patel,
  • Khaled M. Elsayes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43055-021-00684-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Radiology serves in the diagnosis and management of many diseases. Despite its rising importance and use, radiology is not a core component of a lot of medical school curricula. This survey aims to clarify current gaps in the radiological education in Egyptian medical schools. In February–May 2021, 5318 students enrolled in Egyptian medical schools were recruited and given a 20-multiple-choice-question survey assessing their radiology knowledge, radiograph interpretation, and encountered imaging experiences. We measured the objective parameters as a percentage. We conducted descriptive analysis and used Likert scales where values were represented as numerical values. Percentages were graphed afterwards. Results A total of 5318 medical students in Egypt answered our survey. Gender distribution was 45% males and 54% females. The results represented all 7 class years of medical school (six academic years and a final training year). In assessing students’ knowledge of radiology, most students (75%) reported that they received ‘too little’ education, while 20% stated the amount was ‘just right’ and only 4% reported it was ‘too much.’ Sixty-two percent of students stated they were taught radiology through medical imaging lectures. Participants’ future career plans were almost equally distributed. Near half of participants (43%) have not heard about the American College of Radiology Appropriateness Criteria (ACR-AR), while 39% have heard about it but are not familiar with. Conclusions Radiology is a novel underestimated field. Therefore, medical students need more imaging exposure. To accomplish this, attention and efforts should be directed toward undergraduate radiology education to dissolve the gap between radiology and other specialties during clinical practice. A survey answered by medical students can bridge between presence of any current defect in undergraduate radiology teaching and future solutions for this topic.

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