Providing comparison normal examples alongside pathologic thoracic radiographic cases can improve veterinary students’ ability to identify abnormal findings or diagnose disease

Learning by comparison is a frequently employed education strategy used across many disciplines and levels. Interpreting radiographs requires both skills of perception and pattern recognition, which makes comparison techniques particularly useful in this field. In this randomized, prospective, paral...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary radiology & ultrasound 2023-07, Vol.64 (4), p.599-604
Hauptverfasser: Sukut, Sally L., D'Eon, Marcel, Lawson, Joshua, Mayer, Monique N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Learning by comparison is a frequently employed education strategy used across many disciplines and levels. Interpreting radiographs requires both skills of perception and pattern recognition, which makes comparison techniques particularly useful in this field. In this randomized, prospective, parallel‐group study, students enrolled in second and third‐year radiology veterinary courses were given a case‐based thoracic radiographic interpretation assignment. A cohort of the participants was given cases with side‐by‐side comparison normal images while the other cohort only had access to the cases. Twelve cases in total were presented to the students, with 10 cases depicting examples of common thoracic pathologies, while 2 cases were examples of normal. Radiographs of both feline and canine species were represented. Correctness of response to multiple choice questions was tracked, as was year and group (group 1: non compare, Control; group 2: compare, Intervention). Students assigned to group 1 had a lower percentage of correct answers than students assigned to group 2 (45% Control vs. 52% Intervention; P = 0.01). This indicates that side‐by‐side comparison to a normal example is helpful in identifying disease. No statistical significance was noted for the correctness of responses according to the year of training (P = 0.90). The overall poor performance on the assignment, regardless of group or year, shows that students in the early years of undergraduate veterinary radiology training struggle with the interpretation of common pathologies, likely a result of a lack of exposure to a multitude of cases and normal variants.
ISSN:1058-8183
1740-8261
DOI:10.1111/vru.13232