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Deficits in history taking skills among final year medical students in a family medicine course: A study from KSA

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Objectives History taking is considered an important diagnostic tool in medicine. Medical students should be competent in focused history-taking skills to reach initial diagnosis. The aim of this study was… Click to show full abstract

Objectives History taking is considered an important diagnostic tool in medicine. Medical students should be competent in focused history-taking skills to reach initial diagnosis. The aim of this study was to identify deficits in history-taking skills among final year medical students in family medicine courses in Qassim University, KSA. Methods All objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) sheets were collected and analysed to evaluate the history-taking component of the final examination from 2016 until January 2018. Results A total of 94 OSCE sheets were evaluated. Achievement in some history taking skills of the students was low (differential diagnosis 31.9%, alarming symptoms of disease 39.4%, clarification of major complaint-associated symptoms 47.9%, and stress, anxiety, and depression screening 59.6%). However, the students' performances were better with respect to communication skills in general and exploration of the patients' ideas, concerns, and expectations. Significantly more male than female students had a better performance in some skills such as facilitating technique, appropriately exploring major complaint-associated symptoms, enquiring about differential diagnoses, and to rule out alarm symptoms. Conclusions In this study, the students' performance was generally better with respect to communication skills and psychosocial history. However, the students showed poor knowledge in other aspects of history-taking skills as they failed to formulate more than one hypothesis and to ask about alarm symptoms. Teaching communication and clinical reasoning skills and connecting physical and psychosocial aspects of patient care promotes understanding of the patient as a whole and should be taught in all courses of the clinical phase, with emphasis on bedside training.

Keywords: medicine; medical students; taking skills; history; history taking; deficits history

Journal Title: Journal of Taibah University Medical Sciences
Year Published: 2018

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