McGill Journal of Medicine (Nov 2022)

Teaching Medical Students to Suture: Evaluation of a Modern Medical School Curriculum

  • Chantell Cleversey,
  • Alexander Rebchuk,
  • Riley Reel,
  • Graeme Hintz,
  • Pedram Laghaei Farimani,
  • Adrian Yee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26443/mjm.v21i1.949
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1

Abstract

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Background: Medical students are traditionally introduced to suturing in a simulated environment using animal products or synthetic materials. However, there is little evidence to support this pedagogy. Our study explored whether a modern suturing curriculum adequately prepares medical students and examined student preference for learning suturing skills. Methods: Suturing performance was recorded and assessed by expert raters. Students also completed a survey that inquired about self-perceived knowledge and confidence in suturing, and preferred pedagogical methods. Results: The majority (79%) of students that completed our suturing curriculum demonstrated competence in basic suturing techniques. There was no correlation between objective abilities and self-perceived knowledge or confidence. Students reported being significantly more confident suturing anesthetized patients and in simulated environments. Students reported a desire for earlier introduction to suturing and more frequent simulation training. Conclusion: A modern medical school suturing curriculum, comprising online modules and in-person simulation-based learning, adequately develops basic suturing techniques.

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