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A Game Show–Based Curriculum for Teaching Principles of Reproductive Infectious Disease (GBS PRIDE Trial)

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Reproductive infectious disease (RID) is a burgeoning area, and responses to disease outbreaks that portend obstetric and/or gynecologic morbidity require responses from obstetricians/gynecologists (OBGYNs) with sound RID training. Although RID… Click to show full abstract

Reproductive infectious disease (RID) is a burgeoning area, and responses to disease outbreaks that portend obstetric and/or gynecologic morbidity require responses from obstetricians/gynecologists (OBGYNs) with sound RID training. Although RID is a fundamental component of obstetrics and gynecology, limited formal curricula exist in residency programs, and the literature suggests that OBGYN residents have a low awareness and familiarity with basic RID principles. Game show–based teaching interventions have been shown to lead to better long-term retention and improved ability to transfer knowledge through combining incentive elements of game design with effective learning strategies. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether a Jeopardy game show–based curriculum improves OBGYN residents’ confidence in and understanding of RID, clinical sequelae of sexually transmitted infections, and management of their long-term consequences. Objectives The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a game show–based curriculum improves obstetrics and gynecology (OBGYN) residents’ confidence in and understanding of the principles of reproductive infectious disease (RID), clinical manifestations and sequelae of sexually transmitted infection (STI), and management of serious long-term consequences of STIs. Methods A game show–based curriculum was developed from the basic principles of RID, which include the following: (1) distinguishing between clinical manifestations of STIs and management of long-term sequelae of STIs; (2) evaluation and management of common gynecologic infectious diseases, including chronic vaginitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and other pelvic infections; (3) diagnosis and management of perinatal infectious diseases, such as parvovirus, varicella-zoster virus, cytomegalovirus, human immunodeficiency virus, toxoplasmosis, and infection-mediated prematurity; (4) evaluation and management of obstetric and gynecologic postoperative infections; and (5) diagnosis and management of acute and chronic human immunodeficiency virus and hepatitis C virus infections in pregnancy. OBGYN residents at a large urban academic training program were randomized to either a Jeopardy-style educational game show intervention plus a traditional didactic-based curriculum or traditional didactic-based curriculum alone. The study team recruited participants by sending out an e-mail to all of the residents, detailing the study and consent process. Participants from both the intervention and control groups completed confidence and knowledge-based pretests. Posttests were administered 4 weeks after completion of the pretests. Statistical methods were applied to analyze the data. Results Thirty-eight residents were randomized to a Jeopardy-style game show–based educational intervention (n = 19) or to a traditional didactic-based curriculum (n = 19). All of the participants (100%) completed the pre- and posttests. Pretest median scores were similar between both groups, in which the Jeopardy group had a median score of 48.5 and the traditional group had a median score of 51.4 (P = 0.091). The Jeopardy group median test scores improved between the pretest and posttest (48.5 vs 62.8, P ≤ 0.001). The traditional didactic-based curriculum had a minimal increase in its median posttest scores (51.4 compared with 54.2, P = 0.773). The Jeopardy group had significantly higher posttest median scores and confidence scores than the traditional didactic-based curriculum (Jeopardy = 62.8, traditional = 54.2, P = 0.002). Conclusions A game show–based curriculum improves OBGYN residents’ confidence and retention of knowledge regarding RIDs, clinical manifestations and sequelae of STIs, and management of serious long-term consequences of STIs. Additional studies that include longer posttest time intervals are needed to assess the longer-term impact of game show–based curriculum on knowledge retention among OBGYN residents.

Keywords: game show; show based; game; based curriculum

Journal Title: Southern Medical Journal
Year Published: 2020

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