The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial: a randomised study

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The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial : a randomised study. / Rolskov Bojsen, Signe; Räder, Sune Bernd Emil Werner; Holst, Anders Gaardsdal; Kayser, Lars; Ringsted, Charlotte; Hastrup Svendsen, Jesper; Konge, Lars.

In: B M C Medical Education, Vol. 15, 36, 07.03.2015, p. 1-9.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rolskov Bojsen, S, Räder, SBEW, Holst, AG, Kayser, L, Ringsted, C, Hastrup Svendsen, J & Konge, L 2015, 'The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial: a randomised study', B M C Medical Education, vol. 15, 36, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-015-0319-0

APA

Rolskov Bojsen, S., Räder, S. B. E. W., Holst, A. G., Kayser, L., Ringsted, C., Hastrup Svendsen, J., & Konge, L. (2015). The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial: a randomised study. B M C Medical Education, 15, 1-9. [36]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-015-0319-0

Vancouver

Rolskov Bojsen S, Räder SBEW, Holst AG, Kayser L, Ringsted C, Hastrup Svendsen J et al. The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial: a randomised study. B M C Medical Education. 2015 Mar 7;15:1-9. 36. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-015-0319-0

Author

Rolskov Bojsen, Signe ; Räder, Sune Bernd Emil Werner ; Holst, Anders Gaardsdal ; Kayser, Lars ; Ringsted, Charlotte ; Hastrup Svendsen, Jesper ; Konge, Lars. / The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial : a randomised study. In: B M C Medical Education. 2015 ; Vol. 15. pp. 1-9.

Bibtex

@article{b648d58de9824ec48126d88704f230e8,
title = "The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial: a randomised study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Electrocardiogram (ECG) interpretation is of great importance for patient management. However, medical students frequently lack proficiency in ECG interpretation and rate their ECG training as inadequate. Our aim was to examine the effect of a standalone web-based ECG tutorial and to assess the retention of skills using multiple follow-up intervals.METHODS: 203 medical students were included in the study. All participants completed a pre-test, an ECG tutorial, and a post-test. The participants were also randomised to complete a retention-test after short (2-4 weeks), medium (10-12 weeks), or long (18-20 weeks) follow-up. Intragroup comparisons of test scores were done using paired-samples t-test. Intergroup comparisons of test scores were performed using independent-samples t-test and ANOVA, whereas demographic data were compared using ANOVA and Chi-squared test.RESULTS: The overall mean test score improved significantly from 52.7 (SD 16.8) in the pre-test to 68.4 (SD 12.3) in the post-test (p < 0.001). Junior and senior students demonstrated significantly different baseline scores (45.5 vs. 57.8 points; p < 0.001), but showed comparable score gains (16.5 and 15.1 points, respectively; p = 0.48). All three follow-up groups experienced a decrease in test score between post-test and retention-test: from 67.4 (SD 12.3) to 60.2 (SD 8.3) in the short follow-up group, from 71.4 (SD 12.0) to 60.8 (SD 8.9) in the medium follow-up group, and from 66.1 (SD 12.1) to 58.6 (SD 8.6) in the long follow-up group (p < 0.001 for all). However, there were no significant differences in mean retention-test score between the groups (p = 0.33). Both junior and senior students showed a decline in test score at follow-up (from 62.0 (SD 10.6) to 56.2 (SD 9.8) and from 72.9 (SD 11.4) to 62.5 (SD 6.6), respectively). When comparing the pre-test to retention-test delta scores, junior students had learned significantly more than senior students (junior students improved 10.7 points and senior students improved 4.7 points, p = 0.003).CONCLUSION: A standalone web-based ECG tutorial can be an effective means of teaching ECG interpretation skills to medical students. The newly acquired skills are, however, rapidly lost when the intervention is not repeated.",
author = "{Rolskov Bojsen}, Signe and R{\"a}der, {Sune Bernd Emil Werner} and Holst, {Anders Gaardsdal} and Lars Kayser and Charlotte Ringsted and {Hastrup Svendsen}, Jesper and Lars Konge",
year = "2015",
month = mar,
day = "7",
doi = "10.1186/s12909-015-0319-0",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "1--9",
journal = "BMC Medical Education",
issn = "1472-6920",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The acquisition and retention of ECG interpretation skills after a standardized web-based ECG tutorial

T2 - a randomised study

AU - Rolskov Bojsen, Signe

AU - Räder, Sune Bernd Emil Werner

AU - Holst, Anders Gaardsdal

AU - Kayser, Lars

AU - Ringsted, Charlotte

AU - Hastrup Svendsen, Jesper

AU - Konge, Lars

PY - 2015/3/7

Y1 - 2015/3/7

N2 - BACKGROUND: Electrocardiogram (ECG) interpretation is of great importance for patient management. However, medical students frequently lack proficiency in ECG interpretation and rate their ECG training as inadequate. Our aim was to examine the effect of a standalone web-based ECG tutorial and to assess the retention of skills using multiple follow-up intervals.METHODS: 203 medical students were included in the study. All participants completed a pre-test, an ECG tutorial, and a post-test. The participants were also randomised to complete a retention-test after short (2-4 weeks), medium (10-12 weeks), or long (18-20 weeks) follow-up. Intragroup comparisons of test scores were done using paired-samples t-test. Intergroup comparisons of test scores were performed using independent-samples t-test and ANOVA, whereas demographic data were compared using ANOVA and Chi-squared test.RESULTS: The overall mean test score improved significantly from 52.7 (SD 16.8) in the pre-test to 68.4 (SD 12.3) in the post-test (p < 0.001). Junior and senior students demonstrated significantly different baseline scores (45.5 vs. 57.8 points; p < 0.001), but showed comparable score gains (16.5 and 15.1 points, respectively; p = 0.48). All three follow-up groups experienced a decrease in test score between post-test and retention-test: from 67.4 (SD 12.3) to 60.2 (SD 8.3) in the short follow-up group, from 71.4 (SD 12.0) to 60.8 (SD 8.9) in the medium follow-up group, and from 66.1 (SD 12.1) to 58.6 (SD 8.6) in the long follow-up group (p < 0.001 for all). However, there were no significant differences in mean retention-test score between the groups (p = 0.33). Both junior and senior students showed a decline in test score at follow-up (from 62.0 (SD 10.6) to 56.2 (SD 9.8) and from 72.9 (SD 11.4) to 62.5 (SD 6.6), respectively). When comparing the pre-test to retention-test delta scores, junior students had learned significantly more than senior students (junior students improved 10.7 points and senior students improved 4.7 points, p = 0.003).CONCLUSION: A standalone web-based ECG tutorial can be an effective means of teaching ECG interpretation skills to medical students. The newly acquired skills are, however, rapidly lost when the intervention is not repeated.

AB - BACKGROUND: Electrocardiogram (ECG) interpretation is of great importance for patient management. However, medical students frequently lack proficiency in ECG interpretation and rate their ECG training as inadequate. Our aim was to examine the effect of a standalone web-based ECG tutorial and to assess the retention of skills using multiple follow-up intervals.METHODS: 203 medical students were included in the study. All participants completed a pre-test, an ECG tutorial, and a post-test. The participants were also randomised to complete a retention-test after short (2-4 weeks), medium (10-12 weeks), or long (18-20 weeks) follow-up. Intragroup comparisons of test scores were done using paired-samples t-test. Intergroup comparisons of test scores were performed using independent-samples t-test and ANOVA, whereas demographic data were compared using ANOVA and Chi-squared test.RESULTS: The overall mean test score improved significantly from 52.7 (SD 16.8) in the pre-test to 68.4 (SD 12.3) in the post-test (p < 0.001). Junior and senior students demonstrated significantly different baseline scores (45.5 vs. 57.8 points; p < 0.001), but showed comparable score gains (16.5 and 15.1 points, respectively; p = 0.48). All three follow-up groups experienced a decrease in test score between post-test and retention-test: from 67.4 (SD 12.3) to 60.2 (SD 8.3) in the short follow-up group, from 71.4 (SD 12.0) to 60.8 (SD 8.9) in the medium follow-up group, and from 66.1 (SD 12.1) to 58.6 (SD 8.6) in the long follow-up group (p < 0.001 for all). However, there were no significant differences in mean retention-test score between the groups (p = 0.33). Both junior and senior students showed a decline in test score at follow-up (from 62.0 (SD 10.6) to 56.2 (SD 9.8) and from 72.9 (SD 11.4) to 62.5 (SD 6.6), respectively). When comparing the pre-test to retention-test delta scores, junior students had learned significantly more than senior students (junior students improved 10.7 points and senior students improved 4.7 points, p = 0.003).CONCLUSION: A standalone web-based ECG tutorial can be an effective means of teaching ECG interpretation skills to medical students. The newly acquired skills are, however, rapidly lost when the intervention is not repeated.

U2 - 10.1186/s12909-015-0319-0

DO - 10.1186/s12909-015-0319-0

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25889642

VL - 15

SP - 1

EP - 9

JO - BMC Medical Education

JF - BMC Medical Education

SN - 1472-6920

M1 - 36

ER -

ID: 137322771