Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Murphy, KP;Crush, L;O'Malley, E;Daly, FE;Twomey, M;O'Tuathaigh, CMP;Maher, MM;Cryan, JF;O'Connor, OJ
2015
November
Anatomical Sciences Education
Medical student perceptions of radiology use in anatomy teaching
Validated
Optional Fields
VISUAL THINKING STRATEGIES GROSS-ANATOMY VERTICAL INTEGRATION CARDIAC ANATOMY BASIC SCIENCE CT SCANS EDUCATION ART CADAVER IMAGES
8
510
517
The use of radiology in the teaching of anatomy to medical students is gaining in popularity; however, there is wide variation in how and when radiology is introduced into the curriculum. The authors sought to investigate students' perceptions regarding methods used to depict and teach anatomy and effects of integrated radiology instruction on students' abilities to correctly identify imaging modalities and anatomical structures on radiological images. First-year medical students completed questionnaires at the beginning and end of the first academic year that incorporated ten hours of radiologic anatomy teaching in the anatomy curriculum. Questions used a combination of Likert scales, rankings, and binary options. Students were tested on their ability to identify radiology modalities and anatomical structures on radiology images. Preresponse and postresponse rates were 93% (157/168) and 85% (136/160), respectively. Postmodule, 96.3% of students wanted the same or more radiology integration. Furthermore, 92.4% premodule and 96.2% postmodule agreed that Radiology is important in medical undergraduate teaching. Modality and structure identification scores significantly increased from 59.8% to 64.3% (P<0.001) and from 47.4% to 71.2% (P<0.001), respectively. The top three preferred teaching formats premodule and postmodule were (1) anatomy laboratory instruction, (2) interactive sessions combining radiology with anatomy, and (3) anatomy lectures. Postmodule, 38.3% of students were comfortable reviewing radiology images. Students were positive about integrating radiology into anatomy teaching and most students wanted at least the same level of assimilation but that it is used as an adjunct rather than primary method of teaching anatomy. (c) 2014 American Association of Anatomists.
HOBOKEN
1935-9772
10.1002/ase.1502
Grant Details