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Assessing core competences of medical students with a test for flight school applicants 13 Education 1303 Specialist Studies in Education

  • Sigrid Harendza
  • , Henning Soll
  • , Sarah Prediger
  • , Martina Kadmon
  • , Pascal O. Berberat
  • , Viktor Oubaid
  • University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
  • Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)
  • University Hospital Augsburg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Important competences of physicians regarding patient safety include communication, leadership, stress resistance, adherence to procedures, awareness, and teamwork. Similarly, while selected, prospective flight school applicants are tested for the same set of skills. The aim of our study was to assess these core competences in advanced undergraduate medical students from different medical schools. Methods: In 2017, 67 medical students (year 5 and 6) from the universities of Hamburg, Oldenburg, and TU Munich, Germany, participated in the verified Group Assessment Performance (GAP)-Test at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in Hamburg. All participants were rated by DLR assessment observers with a set of empirically derived behavioural checklists. This lists consisted of 6-point rating scales (1: very low occurrence to 6: very high occurrence) and included the competences leadership, teamwork, stress resistance, communication, awareness, and adherence to procedures. Medical students' scores were compared with the results of 117 admitted flight school applicants. Results: Medical students showed significantly higher scores than admitted flight school applicants for adherence to procedures (p <.001, d =.63) and communication (p <.01, d =.62). They reached significantly lower ratings for teamwork (p <.001, d =.77), stress resistance (p < 0.001, d =.70), and awareness (p <.001, d = 1.31). Students in semester 10 showed significantly (p <.02, d =.58) higher scores in domain awareness compared to the final year students. On average, flight school entrance level was not reached by either group for this domain. Conclusions: Advanced medical students' low results for awareness are alarming as awareness is essential and integrative for clinical reasoning and patient safety. Further studies should elucidate and discuss whether awareness needs to be included in medical student selection or integrated into the curriculum in training units.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9
JournalBMC Medical Education
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 7 Jan 2019

Keywords

  • Assessment
  • Competences
  • Flight school applicants
  • Professionalism
  • Undergraduate medical education

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