Brodén Joséphine, Fransson Helena, Vareman Niklas, Pigg Maria
Department of Oral Biology, Faculty of Odontology, Malmö University, Malmö, Sweden.
Department of Dental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden.
BMC Med Educ. 2025 Jan 10;25(1):46. doi: 10.1186/s12909-025-06645-6.
Uncertainty is present in many situations in dental practice, but must not prevent wise clinical decision-making. Dental education should acknowledge uncertainty and teach useful management strategies. This study explored if dental students are aware of, and comfortable with uncertainty. The aims were to (i) measure students' comfort or discomfort with and awareness of uncertainty while conducting risk assessment, and (ii) investigate whether a reflection exercise makes the students more aware of, and comfortable with, uncertainty.
In January 2021, final-year students (n = 51) were randomized to either a structured written reflection exercise (intervention) or to a control exercise. Five months later, in June, each group was assigned the other exercise (cross-over design; ensuring a sufficient sample). Students' statements of uncertainty and comfort were gathered using a developed questionnaire before and after the exercises. The students were blinded to which of the exercises was the intervention. The exercises and questionnaire were administered in mandatory sessions on an internet-based learning platform, ensuring anonymity and informed consent. Potential carryover effects were mitigated by analyzing intervention exercise data from both groups but control exercise data only from the first group.
At baseline 80% (41/51) of the students stated feeling very uncertain, uncertain or neither certain nor uncertain about assessing the risk and 84% were comfortable or very comfortable with their ability to handle the situation, with no between-group differences. The majority, 57% (29/51) of the students stated that they thought an experienced colleague would feel certain or very certain. After the exercise in June, 36% (9/25) of the students exposed to the reflection exercise changed their statements on how certain they felt about their capacity to handle the case.
The exercise did not affect the awareness of uncertainty and the students' comfort with it, as the majority of students stated already feeling comfortable in their ability to handle the situation at baseline. However, the reflection exercise highlighted the students' perception that experience is important in managing uncertainty. There is a need for further research to better understand students' and teachers' perception and attitudes to uncertainty and its effective management.
Not applicable.
牙科实践中的许多情况都存在不确定性,但这绝不能妨碍做出明智的临床决策。牙科教育应该认识到不确定性,并教授有用的管理策略。本研究探讨了牙科学生是否意识到不确定性并对其感到自在。目的是:(i)在进行风险评估时衡量学生对不确定性的自在或不自在程度以及对不确定性的认识,(ii)调查反思练习是否会使学生更清楚地认识到不确定性并对其感到自在。
2021年1月,将最后一年的学生(n = 51)随机分为结构化书面反思练习组(干预组)或对照练习组。五个月后的6月,每组进行另一项练习(交叉设计;确保有足够的样本)。在练习前后,使用一份编制好的问卷收集学生关于不确定性和自在程度的陈述。学生们不知道哪项练习是干预措施。练习和问卷在基于互联网的学习平台上的强制课程中进行,确保匿名性和知情同意。通过分析两组的干预练习数据,但仅分析第一组的对照练习数据,减轻了潜在的遗留效应。
在基线时,80%(41/51)的学生表示在评估风险时感到非常不确定、不确定或既不确定也不不确定,84%的学生对自己处理这种情况的能力感到自在或非常自在,两组之间没有差异。大多数学生,即57%(29/51)表示他们认为一位经验丰富的同事会感到确定或非常确定。在6月的练习后,接受反思练习的学生中有36%(9/25)改变了他们对自己处理病例能力的确定程度的陈述。
该练习并未影响学生对不确定性的认识以及他们对不确定性的自在程度,因为大多数学生在基线时就表示对自己处理这种情况的能力感到自在。然而,反思练习突出了学生的一种观念,即经验在管理不确定性方面很重要。需要进一步研究以更好地理解学生和教师对不确定性及其有效管理的看法和态度。
不适用。