DocumentCode :
2154923
Title :
Evaluation of an Online Analogical Patient Simulation Program
Author :
Thompson, Gregory A. ; Morrison, Robert G. ; Holyoak, K.J. ; Clark, Terry K.
Author_Institution :
Medantic Tech., Salt Lake City, UT
fYear :
0
fDate :
0-0 0
Firstpage :
623
Lastpage :
628
Abstract :
Medulatortrade, a commercial Web-based, variable response, patient simulation application, was modified to test the effect of case sequencing, explicit case comparison, and user-generated case summaries on overall user performance. Senior medical students completed analogous sets of virtual patient cases in different sequences, and their case performance was tracked. A follow-up user satisfaction survey was conducted. A significant effect of case sequencing on analogy transfer was seen only with respect to correct treatment scores (p = . 009). Explicit case comparison had no reliable effect on performance. However, diagnostic accuracy increased (p les .002) while treatment attempts decreased (p = . 05) when subjects were prompted to write case summaries. Satisfaction with the patient simulation program was high. Manipulating case sequences and supporting explicit case comparison yielded mixed results. However, using case summaries as a tool for reflection and proxy for self-explanation led to significant improvement in students´ performance
Keywords :
Internet; medical computing; medical information systems; virtual reality; analogy transfer; case sequencing; commercial Web-based variable response patient simulation application; explicit case comparison; online analogical patient simulation program; user satisfaction survey; user-generated case summaries; virtual patient cases; Cities and towns; Law; Learning systems; Legal factors; Medical diagnosis; Medical diagnostic imaging; Medical simulation; Optimization methods; Psychology; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computer-Based Medical Systems, 2006. CBMS 2006. 19th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Salt Lake City, UT
ISSN :
1063-7125
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2517-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CBMS.2006.85
Filename :
1647640
Link To Document :
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