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A pilot study to assess the utility of a freely downloadable mobile application simulator for undergraduate clinical skills training: a single-blinded, randomised controlled trial

A pilot study to assess the utility of a freely downloadable mobile application simulator for undergraduate clinical skills training: a single-blinded, randomised controlled trial
A pilot study to assess the utility of a freely downloadable mobile application simulator for undergraduate clinical skills training: a single-blinded, randomised controlled trial

BACKGROUND: Medical simulators offer an invaluable educational resource for medical trainees. However, owing to cost and portability restrictions, they have traditionally been limited to simulation centres. With the advent of sophisticated mobile technology, simulators have become cheaper and more accessible. Touch Surgery is one such freely downloadable mobile application simulator (MAS) used by over one million healthcare professionals worldwide. Nevertheless, to date, it has never been formally validated as an adjunct in undergraduate medical education.

METHODS: Medical students in the final 3 years of their programme were recruited and randomised to one of three revision interventions: 1) no formal revision resources, 2) traditional revision resources, or 3) MAS. Students completed pre-test questionnaires and were then assessed on their ability to complete an undisclosed male urinary catheterisation scenario. Following a one-hour quarantined revision period, all students repeated the scenario. Both attempts were scored by allocation-blinded examiners against an objective 46-point mark scheme.

RESULTS: A total of 27 medical students were randomised (n = 9 per group). Mean scores improved between baseline and post-revision attempts by 8.7% (p = 0.003), 19.8% (p = 0.0001), and 15.9% (p = 0.001) for no resources, traditional resources, and MAS, respectively. However, when comparing mean score improvements between groups there were no significant differences.

CONCLUSIONS: Mobile simulators offer an unconventional, yet potentially useful adjunct to enhance undergraduate clinical skills education. Our results indicate that MAS's perform comparably to current gold-standard revision resources; however, they may confer significant advantages in terms of cost-effectiveness and practice flexibility.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Not applicable.

Catheterization/standards, Clinical Competence/standards, Computer Simulation, Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Educational Measurement/methods, Female, Humans, Male, Mobile Applications, Pilot Projects, Students, Medical, Task Performance and Analysis, Young Adult
1472-6920
247
Bartlett, Richard D
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Radenkovic, Dina
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Mitrasinovic, Stefan
b74d8a43-c5b9-4aa8-8a48-7d0b24ac2380
Cole, Andrew
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Pavkovic, Iva
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Denn, Peyton Cheong Phey
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Hussain, Mahrukh
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Kogler, Magdalena
f03b911a-59ec-41bf-93ba-ea9911a8a4c4
Koutsopodioti, Natalia
e424e1f5-e7aa-4ae2-a2db-4f1be87596b4
Uddin, Wasima
fd1b7ff0-80c4-4d18-b403-7859a8376116
Beckley, Ivan
d09efb9a-b163-42e9-a798-4e3eb6956890
Abubakar, Hana
c8c68b27-3b6c-4b01-bb14-659ee2ac1846
Gill, Deborah
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Smith, Daron
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Bartlett, Richard D
bcff778e-b785-4232-9324-404c2af0fc7e
Radenkovic, Dina
a6466a43-1908-4273-af22-e2fe1ad11b6f
Mitrasinovic, Stefan
b74d8a43-c5b9-4aa8-8a48-7d0b24ac2380
Cole, Andrew
06f12e2b-42e9-4b93-a928-2f1c8854dfa4
Pavkovic, Iva
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Denn, Peyton Cheong Phey
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Hussain, Mahrukh
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Kogler, Magdalena
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Koutsopodioti, Natalia
e424e1f5-e7aa-4ae2-a2db-4f1be87596b4
Uddin, Wasima
fd1b7ff0-80c4-4d18-b403-7859a8376116
Beckley, Ivan
d09efb9a-b163-42e9-a798-4e3eb6956890
Abubakar, Hana
c8c68b27-3b6c-4b01-bb14-659ee2ac1846
Gill, Deborah
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Smith, Daron
ac847889-a732-4830-9770-791780b8e3e2

Bartlett, Richard D, Radenkovic, Dina, Mitrasinovic, Stefan, Cole, Andrew, Pavkovic, Iva, Denn, Peyton Cheong Phey, Hussain, Mahrukh, Kogler, Magdalena, Koutsopodioti, Natalia, Uddin, Wasima, Beckley, Ivan, Abubakar, Hana, Gill, Deborah and Smith, Daron (2017) A pilot study to assess the utility of a freely downloadable mobile application simulator for undergraduate clinical skills training: a single-blinded, randomised controlled trial. BMC Medical Education, 17 (1), 247. (doi:10.1186/s12909-017-1085-y).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Medical simulators offer an invaluable educational resource for medical trainees. However, owing to cost and portability restrictions, they have traditionally been limited to simulation centres. With the advent of sophisticated mobile technology, simulators have become cheaper and more accessible. Touch Surgery is one such freely downloadable mobile application simulator (MAS) used by over one million healthcare professionals worldwide. Nevertheless, to date, it has never been formally validated as an adjunct in undergraduate medical education.

METHODS: Medical students in the final 3 years of their programme were recruited and randomised to one of three revision interventions: 1) no formal revision resources, 2) traditional revision resources, or 3) MAS. Students completed pre-test questionnaires and were then assessed on their ability to complete an undisclosed male urinary catheterisation scenario. Following a one-hour quarantined revision period, all students repeated the scenario. Both attempts were scored by allocation-blinded examiners against an objective 46-point mark scheme.

RESULTS: A total of 27 medical students were randomised (n = 9 per group). Mean scores improved between baseline and post-revision attempts by 8.7% (p = 0.003), 19.8% (p = 0.0001), and 15.9% (p = 0.001) for no resources, traditional resources, and MAS, respectively. However, when comparing mean score improvements between groups there were no significant differences.

CONCLUSIONS: Mobile simulators offer an unconventional, yet potentially useful adjunct to enhance undergraduate clinical skills education. Our results indicate that MAS's perform comparably to current gold-standard revision resources; however, they may confer significant advantages in terms of cost-effectiveness and practice flexibility.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Not applicable.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 11 December 2017
Keywords: Catheterization/standards, Clinical Competence/standards, Computer Simulation, Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Educational Measurement/methods, Female, Humans, Male, Mobile Applications, Pilot Projects, Students, Medical, Task Performance and Analysis, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502809
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502809
ISSN: 1472-6920
PURE UUID: d244f1f6-c066-49ae-9f8e-305cd8b02417
ORCID for Deborah Gill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0005-8371-2496

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Date deposited: 08 Jul 2025 16:55
Last modified: 09 Jul 2025 02:04

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Contributors

Author: Richard D Bartlett
Author: Dina Radenkovic
Author: Stefan Mitrasinovic
Author: Andrew Cole
Author: Iva Pavkovic
Author: Peyton Cheong Phey Denn
Author: Mahrukh Hussain
Author: Magdalena Kogler
Author: Natalia Koutsopodioti
Author: Wasima Uddin
Author: Ivan Beckley
Author: Hana Abubakar
Author: Deborah Gill ORCID iD
Author: Daron Smith

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