Abstract

Near-Peers First, Physician Tutors Last. Interim Report of a Mixed-Methods Study Exploring Optimal Timing in Undergraduate Ultrasound Teaching Abstract. While many medical undergraduate ultrasound teaching programmes combine teaching from both physician and student ('near-peer') tutors, there has been little research on how these can be optimally combined. In this study, four groups of 16 medical undergraduates each received twelve lessons from student tutors and four lessons from physician tutors as part of their basic ultrasound course. Each group's physician tutor lessons took place in a different quarter of the course timetable. Quantitative and qualitative data were then collected through an online questionnaire, and 15 participants had 1:1 interviews. This interim analysis shows that, when designing combined ultrasound teaching for medical undergraduates, student tutors should be used at the start and physician tutors in the second half of the programme.

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