Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic poses a huge challenge for clinical teaching due to contact restrictions and social distancing. Medical teachers have to balance potential risks and benefits of bedside teaching, especially in course formats intended to foster practical clinical skills. In this context, we aimed to address the question, whether presence-based teaching formats without patient involvement are suitable to teach practical skills.MethodsIn this quasi-experimental study, presence-based teaching formats with and without patient contact were retrospectively compared regarding their effects on medical students’ theoretical knowledge and practical skills, i.e. the performance and clinical interpretation of the neurological exam. To this end, evaluations from 102 students and their lecturers participating in a neurological bedside teaching course at a German university hospital between October 2020 and April 2021 were obtained. Students were initially randomly assigned to course dates. However, 53 students assigned to courses in November and December 2020, were not able to go bedside due to contact restrictions. These students formed the interventional group and the remaining 49 students the control group. The primary outcome measures were students’ overall grading of the course (school grades, 1–6) as well as ratings of knowledge and skills provided by the students themselves and their lecturers on a numerical rating scale (0–10). Comparison between groups was performed using frequentist and Bayesian t-statistics.ResultsThe teaching format without patient contact received a significantly poorer overall grade by the students (p = 0.018). However, improvements in the students’ self-ratings of knowledge and skills did not differ between the two formats (all p > 0.05, BF10max = 0.42). Moreover, especially practical skills were even rated significantly better in the group without patient contact by the lecturers (p < 0.001).ConclusionsTeaching formats without patient contact are less well-received by the students. However, they are able to teach practical skills regarding the performance and clinical interpretation of examination techniques. Still, the evaluations obtained might not adequately capture the importance of bedside teaching in preparing future physicians for their practice. Perspectively, hybrid teaching approaches including flipped-classroom concepts hold considerable potential to enhance effectiveness of bedside teaching in the present pandemic situation and in the future.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic poses a huge challenge for clinical teaching due to contact restrictions and social distancing

  • Overall grading of the course by the students A total of 102 students were asked to provide an overall grade for the course, 49 in the control and 53 in the interventional group

  • Students in the control group, with patient contact, graded the course significantly better than those in the interventional group without patient contact (mean ± standard deviation (SD) 1.19 ± 0.6 vs. 1.54 ± 0.96, ­tdf (98) = 2.4, p = 0.018), with a medium effect size (Cohens d = -0.47, 95% confidence interval (CI) = [-0.87,0.07])

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic poses a huge challenge for clinical teaching due to contact restrictions and social distancing. Medical teachers have to balance potential risks and benefits of bedside teaching, especially in course formats intended to foster practical clinical skills. For courses in which medical students acquire practical skills, creating alternative course formats is much more difficult [3, 4] Due to this difficulty, many clinical placements, especially bedside teaching courses, were suspended in medical schools [5], whereby many Neurological courses were affected too [6]. Many clinical placements, especially bedside teaching courses, were suspended in medical schools [5], whereby many Neurological courses were affected too [6] In addition to these organizational issues the present pandemic situation is associated with substantial emotional burden for students [7] and clinical teachers working as healthcare providers [8,9,10]

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