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Tumor Board Simulation Improves Interdisciplinary Decision-Making in Medical Students

Kevin Fink, Marie Forster, Matthias Oettle, Marcel Büttner,Chukwuka Eze,Lukas Käsmann,Amanda Tufman,Diego Kauffmann-Guerrero, Toki A. Bolt,Julia Kovacs,Jens Neumann, Johannes Mücke, Sonja Heuser, Stefanie Corradini,Franziska Walter,Maximilian Niyazi,Claus Belka,Martin Dreyling,Martin R. Fischer, Daniel F. Fleischmann

Journal of cancer research and clinical oncology(2024)

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摘要
Training of interdisciplinary clinical reasoning and decision-making skills, essential in daily clinical practice in oncological specialties, are still underrepresented in medical education. Therefore, at LMU University Hospital Munich, we implemented a didactically modified tumor board simulation with experts from five different disciplines (medical oncology, pathology, radiation oncology, radiology, and surgery) presenting patient cases into a one-week course on the basic principles of oncology. In this survey, we examined the self-assessed impact of our course on the interdisciplinary decision-making skills of medical students. Between November-December 2023 and January-February 2024, we surveyed two cohorts of medical students in the third year of medical school in our one-week course before and after participating in the tumor board simulation. The objective was to evaluate the self-assessed knowledge in interdisciplinary clinical decision-making, in integrating ethical considerations into clinical reasoning, and in comprehension of various professional viewpoints in interdisciplinary decision-making. Knowledge was assessed using a five-step Likert scale from 1 (no knowledge) to 5 (complete knowledge). The survey was answered by 76 students before and 55 after the simulation, equaling 60–70
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关键词
Tumor board simulation,Oncology,Decision-making,Medical education
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