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Chinese Journal of Medical Education Research ; (12): 1220-1224,1225, 2016.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-606199

ABSTRACT

Objective To establish a short-term scenario simulation training campus in senior med-ical students before graduation for the sake of a smooth transformation from medical students to residents. Methods There were 101 participants involved in the study . All the participants attended emergency medicine traditional teaching, including 51 fourth-year medical students and 50 fifth-year medical students. The 48 students who took the emergency scenario simulation training course were classified as training camp group while the other 53 students were classified as control group. The control group only participated in the emergency medicine traditional teaching, and the training camp group participated in the emergency sce-nario simulation training course on the basis of control group's routine teaching, including advanced cardiac life support and team collaboration, sepsis and doctor-patient communication, polypnea and crisis manage-ment, disorder of consciousness and interdisciplinary teamwork, multiple injuries and emergency plans, and comprehensive case evaluation. The training camp group was divided into groups and received evaluation of performance on treating emergency simulated case (clinical skills, teamwork, doctor-patient communication) before and after class. The training camp group was received questionnaire survey after class. SAS 9.2 was used to do the t test and descriptive analysis. Results There were no statistically significant differences (P>0.05) between the scores of the performance on clinical skills, teamwork, doctor-patient communication of training camp group and control group before class. The scores of training camp group after class were sig-nificantly better than those of control group (P<0.05). In addition, the course had a high recognition by students. 92% (44/48) students thought the course was contributed to improving the ability of crisis man-agement and clinical practice and were in favor of developing similar courses for senior medical students. Conclusion Scenario simulation training campus can strengthen the cultivation of medical students' com-prehensive thinking, independent clinical decision making, practice skills and communication ability in the final stage of medical education as well as enhancing their self-confidence so as to help them to adapt to the real clinical work.

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