Breast Pain in a Lactating Person: An Objective Structured Clinical Examination for Clerkship Students.
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2025-01
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Introduction
Breastfeeding provides significant health benefits for families and cost-saving potential for health care systems. Physician support is crucial to lactation success. However, lactation education curricula across the US do not reliably meet published standards, and educators lack a standardized tool to assess student competency. We developed a breastfeeding-focused OSCE for UME learners that assesses students' application of lactation knowledge in clinical settings.Methods
This lactation OSCE for medical students includes a patient interview, postencounter note, and evaluation by a trained standardized patient (SP). OSCE performance was compared between clerkship students who participated in a pilot lactation curriculum and students who did not participate in this curriculum. Primary outcome was correct identification of primary diagnosis. Secondary outcomes included postencounter note total score, history score, management/counseling score, and SP communication score. Data were analyzed using bivariate statistics.Results
Twenty-eight students completed the OSCE, of whom 15 (54%) participated in the pilot lactation curriculum. Pilot students were more likely than nonpilot students to correctly identify the primary diagnosis (73% vs. 31%, p = .02), score higher on management/counseling (median 4.0 [IQR: 4.0, 6.0] vs. 4.0 [IQR: 2.0, 4.0], p = .04), and communicate better (73% vs. 63%, p = .002), and also nearly twice as likely to score ≥50th percentile overall (73% vs. 39%, p = .06) and have higher total postencounter note scores (median 22.0 [IQR: 20.0, 26.0] vs. 19.0 [IQR: 18.0, 22.0], p = .18).Discussion
This OSCE effectively assesses UME learners' ability to clinically apply lactation knowledge.Type
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Young, Nicola, Kelly Branford, Deborah L Engle, Sarah K Dotters-Katz and Andrea Dotson (2025). Breast Pain in a Lactating Person: An Objective Structured Clinical Examination for Clerkship Students. MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources, 21. p. 11543. 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11543 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34221.
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Sarah K. Dotters-Katz
My passion is for medical education. As a resident, I was recognized for excellence in teaching by the medical students during all four years of my training, and completed the “Resident as Teacher” program during that time as well. I have obtained my Masters of Medical Health Professions Education from Eastern Virginia Medical School from 2016-2017. During that time, I also completed the University of North Carolina Faculty Scholars program and was inducted into the University of North Carolina’s Academy of Educators. My passion for teaching was recognized by medical students and residents alike at UNC, receiving teaching awards from both medical students and residents. In coming to Duke in 2017, I joined the Division of Education as the Assistant Director of Undergraduate Medical Education. I now serve as the Director of Undergraduate Medical Education, where I have the opportunity to work with medical students, physician assistant students and nurse practitioner students on a regular basis as well as help our faculty and residents become better teachers. I am proud and excited to continue to bring energy and enthusiasm for teaching to Duke and help inspire learners to love Obstetrics and Gynecology as much as I do.
Andrea Dotson
Unless otherwise indicated, scholarly articles published by Duke faculty members are made available here with a CC-BY-NC (Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial) license, as enabled by the Duke Open Access Policy. If you wish to use the materials in ways not already permitted under CC-BY-NC, please consult the copyright owner. Other materials are made available here through the author’s grant of a non-exclusive license to make their work openly accessible.
