Educational strategies for teaching evidence-based practice to undergraduate health students: systematic review.
- Author:
Konstantinos KYRIAKOULIS
1
;
Athina PATELAROU
;
Aggelos LALIOTIS
;
Andrew C WAN
;
Michail MATALLIOTAKIS
;
Chrysoula TSIOU
;
Evridiki PATELAROU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Educational measurement; Evidence-based practice; Health occupations; Medical students; Teaching
- MeSH: Academies and Institutes; Congresses as Topic; Delivery of Health Care; Dentistry; Education; Educational Measurement; Evidence-Based Medicine; Evidence-Based Practice*; Health Occupations; Humans; Mental Competency; Nursing; Pharmacy; Students, Medical
- From:Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2016;13(1):34-
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: PURPOSE: The aim of this systematic review was to find best teaching strategies for teaching evidence-based practice (EBP) to undergraduate health students that have been adopted over the last years in healthcare institutions worldwide. METHODS: The authors carried out a systematic, comprehensive bibliographic search using Medline database for the years 2005 to March 2015 (updated in March 2016). Search terms used were chosen from the USNLM Institutes of Health list of MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) and free text key terms were used as well. Selected articles were measured based on the inclusion criteria of this study and initially compared in terms of titles or abstracts. Finally, articles relevant to the subject of this review were retrieved in full text. Critical appraisal was done to determine the effects of strategy of teaching evidence-based medicine (EBM). RESULTS: Twenty articles were included in the review. The majority of the studies sampled medical students (n=13) and only few conducted among nursing (n=2), pharmacy (n=2), physiotherapy/therapy (n=1), dentistry (n=1), or mixed disciplines (n=1) students. Studies evaluated a variety of educational interventions of varying duration, frequency and format (lectures, tutorials, workshops, conferences, journal clubs, and online sessions), or combination of these to teach EBP. We categorized interventions into single interventions covering a workshop, conference, lecture, journal club, or e-learning and multifaceted interventions where a combination of strategies had been assessed. Seven studies reported an overall increase to all EBP domains indicating a higher EBP competence and two studies focused on the searching databases skill. CONCLUSION: Followings were deduced from above analysis: multifaceted approach may be best suited when teaching EBM to health students; the use of technology to promote EBP through mobile devices, simulation, and the web is on the rise; and the duration of the interventions varying form some hours to even months was not related to the students' EBP competence.