Effects of undergraduate ultrasound education on cross-sectional image understanding and visual-spatial ability - a prospective study

Radiological imaging is crucial in modern clinical practice and requires thorough and early training. An understanding of cross-sectional imaging is essential for effective interpretation of such imaging. This study examines the extent to which completing an undergraduate ultrasound course has posit...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC medical education 2024-06, Vol.24 (1), p.619-12, Article 619
Hauptverfasser: Weimer, Johannes, Ruppert, Johannes, Vieth, Thomas, Weinmann-Menke, Julia, Buggenhagen, Holger, Künzel, Julian, Rink, Maximilian, Lorenz, Liv, Merkel, Daniel, Ille, Carlotta, Yang, Yang, Müller, Lukas, Kloeckner, Roman, Weimer, Andreas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Radiological imaging is crucial in modern clinical practice and requires thorough and early training. An understanding of cross-sectional imaging is essential for effective interpretation of such imaging. This study examines the extent to which completing an undergraduate ultrasound course has positive effects on the development of visual-spatial ability, knowledge of anatomical spatial relationships, understanding of radiological cross-sectional images, and theoretical ultrasound competencies. This prospective observational study was conducted at a medical school with 3rd year medical students as part of a voluntary extracurricular ultrasound course. The participants completed evaluations (7-level Likert response formats and dichotomous questions "yes/no") and theoretical tests at two time points (T1 = pre course; T2 = post course) to measure their subjective and objective cross-sectional imaging skills competencies. A questionnaire on baseline values and previous experience identified potential influencing factors. A total of 141 participants were included in the study. Most participants had no previous general knowledge of ultrasound diagnostics (83%), had not yet performed a practical ultrasound examination (87%), and had not attended any courses on sonography (95%). Significant subjective and objective improvements in competencies were observed after the course, particularly in the subjective sub-area of "knowledge of anatomical spatial relationships" (p = 0.009). Similarly, participants showed improvements in the objective sub-areas of "theoretical ultrasound competencies" (p 
ISSN:1472-6920
1472-6920
DOI:10.1186/s12909-024-05608-7