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1.
Clin Teach ; 19(2): 100-105, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35078276

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Student performance in examinations reflects on both teaching and student learning. Very short answer questions require students to provide a self-generated response to a question of between one and five words, which removes the cueing effects of single best answer format examinations while still enabling efficient machine marking. The aim of this study was to pilot a method of analysing student errors in an applied knowledge test consisting of very short answer questions, which would enable identification of common areas that could potentially guide future teaching. METHODS: We analysed the incorrect answers given by 1417 students from 20 UK medical schools in a formative very short answer question assessment delivered online. FINDINGS: The analysis identified four predominant types of error: inability to identify the most important abnormal value, over or unnecessary investigation, lack of specificity of radiology requesting and over-reliance on trigger words. CONCLUSIONS: We provide evidence that an additional benefit to the very short answer question format examination is that analysis of errors is possible. Further assessment is required to determine if altering teaching based on the error analysis can lead to improvements in student performance.


Subject(s)
Educational Measurement , Students, Medical , Educational Measurement/methods , Humans , Knowledge , Schools, Medical , Teaching
2.
Clin Anat ; 34(5): 660-667, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32065677

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Dissemination of research depends on published work being accessible. In many disciplines open access (OA) research is more frequently cited, although this has never before been demonstrated amongst anatomy publications. The objective of this study was to assess a selection of published anatomy papers to determine the effect of gold and bronze OA availability on citation rates. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Taken together, 625 peer-reviewed publications were identified from 2927 abstracts presented at meetings of AACA (2003-2010) and BACA (2000-2015). RESULTS: In total 18.75% (69 of 368) of papers presented at BACA and 21.79% (56 of 257) of those presented at AACA reached OA publication.  Citation rates are significantly higher amongst OA papers as compared to non-OA papers presented at these two anatomy conferences (OA 18.95, Non-OA 15.14 p = 0.047). OA papers were most commonly themed around education and pure anatomy. CONCLUSIONS: The average OA publication rate of 20.0% in anatomical research arising from these conferences is significantly lower than the average rate for scientific research. Citation rates are significantly higher amongst OA anatomy papers presented at these two conferences.


Subject(s)
Access to Information , Anatomy , Biomedical Research , Information Dissemination , Open Access Publishing , Peer Review, Research , Periodicals as Topic , Humans , New England , United States
3.
BMJ Open ; 10(10): e040815, 2020 10 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33033034

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To summarise studies describing incidence of sudden cardiac death in a general population of young individuals to inform screening policy. DESIGN: Systematic review. DATA SOURCES: Database searches of MEDLINE, EMBASE and the Cochrane library (all inception to current) on 29 April 2019 (updated 16 November 2019), and forward/backward citation tracking of eligible studies. STUDY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: All studies that reported incidence of sudden cardiac death in young individuals (12-39 years) in a general population, with no restriction on language or date. Planned subgroups were incidence by age, sex, race and athletic status (including military personnel). DATA EXTRACTION: Two reviewers independently assessed study eligibility, extracted study data and assessed risk of bias using the Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal checklist for prevalence studies. ANALYSIS: Reported incidence of sudden cardiac death in the young per 100 000 person-years. RESULTS: 38 studies that reported incidence across five continents. We identified substantial heterogeneity in population, sudden cardiac death definition, and case ascertainment methods, precluding meta-analysis. Median reported follow-up years was 6.97 million (IQR 2.34 million-23.70 million) and number of sudden cardiac death cases was 64 (IQR 40-251). In the general population, the median of reported incidence was 1.7 sudden cardiac death per 100 000 person-years (IQR 1.3-2.6, range 0.75-11.9). Most studies (n=14, 54%) reported an incidence between one and two cases per 100 000 person-years. Incidence was higher in males and older individuals. CONCLUSIONS: This systematic review identified variability in the reported incidence of sudden cardiac death in the young across studies. Most studies reported an incidence between one and two cases per 100 000 person-years. PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER: CRD42019120563.


Subject(s)
Checklist , Death, Sudden, Cardiac , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Databases, Factual , Death, Sudden, Cardiac/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Young Adult
5.
Clin Anat ; 30(2): 140-144, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27935106

ABSTRACT

A recent study examined the rate of full-length research paper publication following abstract presentation at the British association of clinical anatomists (BACA) annual meetings. The accepted standard for research dissemination is peer-reviewed publication following presentation at a national or international meeting. The study objectives were quantitative assessment of the abstracts presented at the American Association of Clinical Anatomists' (AACA) annual meetings with regards to the rate of subsequent full-length publication and comparison to BACA publication rates. All abstracts presented at the AACA annual meetings between 2003 and 2010 were analysed. MEDLINE was searched to identify peer-reviewed publications arising from each presented abstract. In total, 1,120 abstracts were presented with 22.9% (n = 257) subsequently published as full-length research papers. The mean number of abstracts presented each year was 140.0 ± 35.9. The median time to publication was 16 months. Chi-squared analysis showed the publication rate of abstracts presented at AACA (22.9%) was not statistically significantly different to BACA (20.4%) (P = 0.09). A total of 11.3% (n = 29) of the articles were published as full-length research articles before presentation as an abstract at an AACA meeting compared to 5.4% of abstracts presented at a BACA meeting. These rates are lower but comparable to those of surgical specialty meetings. Further work should try to identify any concerning reasons for the reduced rate of abstract publication in anatomical research. Clin. Anat. 30:140-144, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
Anatomy/organization & administration , Publications/statistics & numerical data , Americas , Anatomy/statistics & numerical data
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