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Assessment of final-year medical students’ performance in diagnosing critical findings on chest X-ray

Purpose Due to the recently emerging shortage in medical staff during the novel corona virus pandemic, several countries have rushed their undergraduate medical students into the emergency department. The accuracy of diagnosing critical findings on X-rays by senior medical students is not well asses...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Emergency radiology 2021-04, Vol.28 (2), p.333-338
Main Authors: Samara, Osama, AlRyalat, Saif Aldeen, Malkawi, Lna, Ali, Mo’ath Bani, Kilani, Areej, Alkhalaileh, Zain, Alkhatib, Lean, Hamad, Ibrahim, Alawneh, Yazan, Al-Ryalat, Nosaiba, Ryalat, Soukaina
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Purpose Due to the recently emerging shortage in medical staff during the novel corona virus pandemic, several countries have rushed their undergraduate medical students into the emergency department. The accuracy of diagnosing critical findings on X-rays by senior medical students is not well assessed. In this study, we aim to assess the knowledge and accuracy of undergraduate final-year medical students in diagnosing life-threatening emergency conditions on chest x-ray. Method This is a cross-sectional nationwide survey across all medical schools in Jordan. Through an electronic questionnaire, participants were sequentially shown a total of six abnormal X-rays and one normal. For each X-ray, participants were asked to choose the most likely diagnosis, and to grade the degree of self-confidence regarding the accuracy of their answer in a score from 0 (not confident) to 10 (very confident). Results We included a total of 530 participants. All participants answered at least six out of seven questions correctly, out of them, 139 (26.2%) participants answered all questions correctly. Pneumoperitoneum was the highest correct answer (93.8%), whereas flail chest was the least correctly answered case with only 310 (58.5%) correct answers. Regarding self-confidence for each question, 338 participants (63.8%) reported very high overall self-confidence level. Answers related to tension pneumothorax had the highest confidence level. Conclusion Senior Jordanian medical students showed good knowledge with high confidence levels in diagnosing life-threatening conditions on chest x-rays, supporting their incorporation in the emergency department during pandemics and confirming the reliability of information they can extract.
ISSN:1070-3004
1438-1435
DOI:10.1007/s10140-020-01893-z