Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Addressing musculoskeletal curricular inadequacies within undergraduate medical education
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Background
Musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries and diseases place a significant burden on the health care system. Despite this, research indicates that physician training in the area of MSK medicine has historically been inadequate, with a majority of medical students feeling that their training in MSK medicine is lacking. The goal of this investigation was to evaluate the efficacy of a new preclinical MSK curriculum that was implemented within a nationally accredited allopathic medical program.
Methods
Retrospective analysis was completed on five consecutive years (2017–2021) of preclinical MSK curricular data for 549 medical students, including mid and end-of-course examinations and end-of-course student satisfaction surveys. Both parametric and non-parametric methods of analysis were used to examine within and between class differences (P < 0.05).
Results
The new MSK curriculum covered 15 of 16 “core or must know” topics in MSK medicine, and academic performance was consistently high over the 5-year period of analysis (final course marks ranged from 76.6 ± 7.1 to 81.4 ± 8.1; failures/year: range from 0 to 4), being equal or above levels of student performance observed for other courses delivered during preclinical studies. Likert data from end-of-course surveys demonstrated that feedback was overwhelmingly positive (overall course satisfaction ranged from a low of 3.07/4.00 to a high of 3.56/4.00) and indicated that students felt that the new preclinical MSK curriculum did effectively support medical student learning and knowledge retention.
Conclusion
Results are expected to help advance the current body of knowledge that is dedicated to improving physician learning and knowledge retention in the area of MSK medicine and provides a curricular model that could be used by other nationally accredited medical programs to help enhance MSK learning at the preclinical levels of physician training.
Title: Addressing musculoskeletal curricular inadequacies within undergraduate medical education
Description:
Abstract
Background
Musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries and diseases place a significant burden on the health care system.
Despite this, research indicates that physician training in the area of MSK medicine has historically been inadequate, with a majority of medical students feeling that their training in MSK medicine is lacking.
The goal of this investigation was to evaluate the efficacy of a new preclinical MSK curriculum that was implemented within a nationally accredited allopathic medical program.
Methods
Retrospective analysis was completed on five consecutive years (2017–2021) of preclinical MSK curricular data for 549 medical students, including mid and end-of-course examinations and end-of-course student satisfaction surveys.
Both parametric and non-parametric methods of analysis were used to examine within and between class differences (P < 0.
05).
Results
The new MSK curriculum covered 15 of 16 “core or must know” topics in MSK medicine, and academic performance was consistently high over the 5-year period of analysis (final course marks ranged from 76.
6 ± 7.
1 to 81.
4 ± 8.
1; failures/year: range from 0 to 4), being equal or above levels of student performance observed for other courses delivered during preclinical studies.
Likert data from end-of-course surveys demonstrated that feedback was overwhelmingly positive (overall course satisfaction ranged from a low of 3.
07/4.
00 to a high of 3.
56/4.
00) and indicated that students felt that the new preclinical MSK curriculum did effectively support medical student learning and knowledge retention.
Conclusion
Results are expected to help advance the current body of knowledge that is dedicated to improving physician learning and knowledge retention in the area of MSK medicine and provides a curricular model that could be used by other nationally accredited medical programs to help enhance MSK learning at the preclinical levels of physician training.
Related Results
Lifestyle behaviour in adolescence and musculoskeletal pain 11 years later: The Trøndelag Health Study
Lifestyle behaviour in adolescence and musculoskeletal pain 11 years later: The Trøndelag Health Study
AbstractBackgroundThere is limited knowledge on the association between lifestyle behaviour in adolescence and musculoskeletal pain in young adulthood. This study aimed to investig...
Undergraduate medical education in India: Need for total modification
Undergraduate medical education in India: Need for total modification
Background:
With tremendous advances in medical and allied sciences and India passing through epidemiological transition, the need for overhauling undergraduate medical education w...
Análise da constituição da Proposta Curricular de Santa Catarina pela perspectiva do ciclo de políticas
Análise da constituição da Proposta Curricular de Santa Catarina pela perspectiva do ciclo de políticas
No presente artigo, o autor interpreta aspectos da trajetória de constituição das fases históricas da Proposta Curricular de Santa Catarina sob a perspectiva do “policy cycle appro...
Musculoskeletal disorders in video gamers – a systematic review
Musculoskeletal disorders in video gamers – a systematic review
Abstract
Background
Video gaming is a recreational activity with yearly increasing popularity. It is mostly a sedentary behavior combined with repet...
Evolution of Physical Education Undergraduate Majors in Higher Education in China
Evolution of Physical Education Undergraduate Majors in Higher Education in China
Physical education (PE) undergraduate programs in higher education in China have evolved over the last 100 years. As a result, a comprehensive system of physical education undergra...
Exploring the Relationship Between Sleep Quality and Musculoskeletal Pain in Internet-Addicted College Students
Exploring the Relationship Between Sleep Quality and Musculoskeletal Pain in Internet-Addicted College Students
Background: The pervasive use of the internet among college students has raised concerns about internet addiction and its associated health implications. This addiction is characte...
Musculoskeletal Disorders: Prevalence and Its factors Among Computer User Bankers of Dessie City, Northeast Ethiopia, 2022
Musculoskeletal Disorders: Prevalence and Its factors Among Computer User Bankers of Dessie City, Northeast Ethiopia, 2022
Abstract
Background
Musculoskeletal disorders are a major cause of occupational disability worldwide in computer users and impose a considerable burden on the individual, s...
Analysis of working posture and risk of musculoskeletal complaints among vegetable farmers
Analysis of working posture and risk of musculoskeletal complaints among vegetable farmers
Background: Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) are disorders of body tissue that are related to movement, such as muscles, tendons, ligaments, nerves, or spinal joints. Farmers often...

