Medical Schools' Ophthalmology Course: An Appraisal by Ophthalmology Residents

Objective: To investigate the perception and satisfaction of ophthalmology residents with the currently provided ophthalmology curricula to medical students. Methods: A cross-sectional survey involving first to fourth year ophthalmology residents (N = 106) from all regions of Saudi Arabia was conduc...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of general medicine 2021-01, Vol.14, p.8365-8372
Hauptverfasser: Al-Najmi, Yahya Abdulrahman, Subki, Ahmed Hussein, Alzaidi, Nazih Suwalih, Butt, Nadeem Shafique, Alsammahi, Alaa Abdulhamid, Madani, Firas Mohamed, Alsallum, Mohammed Saad, Al-Harbi, Rakan Salah, Alhibshi, Nizar Mohammed
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: To investigate the perception and satisfaction of ophthalmology residents with the currently provided ophthalmology curricula to medical students. Methods: A cross-sectional survey involving first to fourth year ophthalmology residents (N = 106) from all regions of Saudi Arabia was conducted between December 2018 and February 2019. An online questionnaire explored opinions about the ophthalmology course regarding three dimensions. Firstly, adequacy in covering essential parts of the specialty; secondly, improvements required; and thirdly, effectiveness. A score (0-21) was calculated, indicating the overall suitability of the ophthalmology course. In addition, factors of good overall suitability (score >= 10) were analyzed. Results: Regarding adequacy, respondents opined that the ophthalmology course did not reasonably cover the basic part (35.8%), clinical part (61.3%), common disease (26.4%), and emergencies (39.6%). Concerning improvements required, more than 80% of the participants expressed that the course required to be improved for all its features, including duration (80.2%), objectives (85.8%), content (82.1%), organization (83.0%), and supervision (81.1%). As to effectiveness, half of them deemed the course unhelpful in familiarizing general practitioners with common ophthalmic diseases and emergencies. Overall, the ophthalmology course was generally deemed suitable (score >= 10) for only 27.4% of the participants, with no differences across gender, level, or region. Conclusion: Ophthalmology residents perceived multiple deficits in the current Saudi ophthalmology teaching course. Significant improvements in ophthalmologic curricula are required, besides coping with unprecedented technological advancement in the ophthalmological field.
ISSN:1178-7074
1178-7074
DOI:10.2147/IJGM.S330044