• The clinical teacher · Jul 2014

    Comparative Study

    Peer-teaching of evidence-based medicine.

    • Eliot Rees, Yashashwi Sinha, Abhishek Chitnis, James Archer, Victoria Fotheringham, and Stephen Renwick.
    • School of Medicine, Keele University, Staffordshire, UK.
    • Clin Teach. 2014 Jul 1; 11 (4): 259-63.

    BackgroundMany medical schools teach the principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) as part of their undergraduate curriculum. Medical students perceive that EBM is valuable to their undergraduate and postgraduate career. Students may experience barriers to applying EBM principles, especially when searching for evidence or identifying high-quality resources.ContextThe UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Evidence Search is a service that enables access to authoritative clinical and non-clinical evidence and best practice through a web-based portal.InnovationEvidence-based medicine workshops were organised and delivered by fourth-year medical students, having first received training from NICE to become NICE student champions. The workshops covered the basic principles of EBM and focused on retrieving EBM resources for study through the NICE Evidence Search portal. The scheme was evaluated using a pre-workshop survey and an 8-12 week post-workshop survey. Self-reported confidence in searching for evidence-based resources increased from 29 per cent before the workshop to 87 per cent after the workshop. Only 1 per cent of students rated evidence-based resources as their first preference pre-workshop, compared with 31 per cent post-workshop.ImplicationsThe results show that although many students were aware of evidence-based resources, they tended not to use them as their preferred resource. Despite appreciating the value of evidence-based resources, few students were confident in accessing and using such resources for pre-clinical study. A peer-taught workshop in EBM improved students' confidence with, and use of, evidence-based resources.© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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