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Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36537185

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: It aimed to investigate physical therapy students' perception of their ability of clinical and clinical decision-making skills after a simulation-based learning course in the United States. METHODS: Survey questionnaires were administered to voluntary participants, including 44 second and third-year physical therapy students of the University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences during 2021­2022. Thirty-six questionnaire items consisted of 4 demographic items, 1 general evaluation, 21 test items for clinical decision-making skills, and 4 clinical skill items. Descriptive and inferential statistics evaluated differences in students' perception of their ability in clinical decision-making and clinical skills, pre- and post-simulation, and post-first clinical experience during 2021­2022. RESULTS: Friedman test revealed a significant increase from pre- to post-simulation in perception of the ability of clinical and clinical decision-making skills total tool score (P<0.001), clinical decision-making 21-item score (P<0.001), and clinical skills score (P<0.001). No significant differences were found between post-simulation and post-first clinical experience. Post-hoc tests indicated a significant difference between pre-simulation and post-simulation (P<0.001) and between pre-simulation and post-first clinical experience (P<0.001). Forty-three students (97.6%) either strongly agreed (59.1%) or agreed (38.5%) that simulation was a valuable learning experience. CONCLUSION: The above findings suggest that simulation-based learning helped students begin their first clinical experience with enhanced clinical and clinical decision-making skills.


Subject(s)
Learning , Students , Humans , United States , Clinical Competence , Physical Therapy Modalities , Clinical Decision-Making , Perception
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