•  
  •  
 

Journal of Medical Education

Preference of Online Database Access for Medical Students: A Before-and-After Survey of Evidence-Based Medicine Course

Abstract

Background: Evidence-based medicine (EBM) has been identified as a core competency that helps physicians improve healthcare quality. Acquiring evidence-based information is a crucial step in EBM implementation. The present study determined the influence of EBM instruction on evidence-based online database access of medical students. Methods: A structured questionnaire survey was administered to third-year undergraduate medical students enrolled in an 18-week elective course in EBM at Taipei Medical University prior to course commencement and after course completion. The means of the pre- and post-course responses were compared using paired-sample t-test. Results: After course completion, the students were more likely to access four evidence-based retrieval databases. Specifically, medical students more often accessed the Cochrane Library (p < 0.001), MD Consult/Clinical Key (p < 0.001), MEDLINE/PubMed (p < 0.001), and UpToDate (p < 0.001). By contrast, the use of Web portals did not increase (p = 0.380). Common motivations for accessing online databases were self-learning and for completing coursework. Conclusions: The EBM course was helpful in increasing the use of online evidence-based databases for medical students. This study has important implications for the delivery of EBM instruction.

First Page

176

Last Page

185

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS