Abstract
Objective To determine medical students’ self awareness
and ability to discriminate right from left; to identify
characteristics associated with this ability; and to identify
any techniques used to aid discrimination.
Design Questionnaire and psychometric study.
Setting Undergraduate medical school, Northern Ireland.
Participants 290 first year undergraduate students.
Main outcome measure Medical students’ ability to
discriminate right from left using the Bergen right-left
discrimination test.
Results Test scores ranged from 31 to 143 on a scale of 0-
144 (mean 112 (standard deviation 22.2)). Male students
significantly outperformed female students (117.18
(26.96) v 110.80 (28.94)). Students who wanted to be
surgeons performed significantly better than those who
wanted to be general practitioners or medical doctors
(119.87 (25.15) v 110.55 (27.36) v 112.50 (26.88)). The
interaction effect for sex and career wishes was not
significant (P=0.370). Students who used learnt
techniques to help them discriminate scored significantly
less than those who did not (P
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | a2826 |
| Number of pages | 4 |
| Journal | British Medical Journal |
| Volume | 337 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Dec 2008 |
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