BackgroundApart from objective exam results, the overall feeling of preparedness is important for a successful transition process from being a student to becoming a qualified doctor. This study examines the association between self-assessed deficits in medical skills and knowledge and the feeling of preparedness of junior doctors in order to determine which aspects of medical education need to be addressed in more detail in order to improve the quality of this transition phase and in order to increase patient safety.MethodsA cohort of 637 doctors with up to two years of clinical work experience was included in this analysis and was asked about the overall feeling of preparedness and self-assessed deficits with regard to clinical knowledge and skills. Three logistic regression models were used to identify medical skills which predict the feeling of preparedness.ResultsAll in all, about 60% of the participating doctors felt poorly prepared for post-graduate training. Self-assessed deficits in ECG interpretation (aOR: 4.39; 95% CI: 2.012-9.578), treatment and therapy planning (aOR: 3.42; 95% CI: 1.366-8.555), and intubation (aOR: 2.10; 95% CI: 1.092-4.049) were found to be independently associated with the overall feeling of preparedness in the final regression model.ConclusionsMany junior doctors in Germany felt inadequately prepared for being a doctor. With regard to the contents of medical curricula, our results show that more emphasis on ECG-interpretation, treatment and therapy planning and intubation is required to improve the feeling of preparedness of medical graduates.
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the incidence of hand dermatitis, the impact of potential risk factors and the efficacy of skin bioengineering in a prospectively followed cohort of apprentice nurses. 104 participants were prospectively followed for 3 years. Before the start of training, after about 1 year and in the third year of occupational exposure, a standardized questionnaire was distributed, and a clinical examination with skin bioengineering of the dorsum of hand and forearm was performed. The 12-month period prevalence of self-reported symptoms of hand dermatitis was 36.5%[95%-confidence interval (CI) 27.3-46.6] at intermediate follow-up and 43.3% (95%-CI 33.6-53.3) at the final examination. Apprentices with self-reported symptoms at the final examination showed a significant increase of transepidermal water loss (TEWL) at the dorsal hand from 10.15 g/m2h to 13.55 g/m2h. TEWL at this site did, at the initial examination, not differ significantly between persons who later reported symptoms of hand dermatitis at the final examination and those who did not (10.50 g/m2h versus 10.15 g/m2h, respectively). Our results do not support the notion that an increased basal TEWL is a good indicator for hand dermatitis risk.
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