WE-R NHS (Workforce and Education Research NHS)

Take away body parts! An investigation into the use of 3D-printed anatomical models in undergraduate anatomy education

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Extract from Abstract:

Understanding the three-dimensional (3D) nature of the human form is imperative for effective medical practice and the emergence of 3D printing creates numerous opportunities to enhance aspects of medical and healthcare training. A recently deceased, un-embalmed donor was scanned through high-resolution computed tomography. The scan data underwent segmentation and post-processing and a range of 3D-printed anatomical models were produced. A four-stage mixed-methods study was conducted to evaluate the educational value of the models in a medical program. (1) A quantitative pre/post-test to assess change in learner knowledge following 3D-printed model usage in a small group tutorial; (2) student focus group (3) a qualitative student questionnaire regarding personal student model usage (4) teaching faculty evaluation. The use of 3D-printed models in small-group anatomy teaching session resulted in a significant increase in knowledge (P = 0.0001) when compared to didactic 2D-image based teaching methods. Student focus groups yielded six key themes regarding the use of 3D-printed anatomical models: model properties, teaching integration, resource integration, assessment, clinical imaging, and pathology and anatomical variation.....(full abstract available at link).

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Additional information

Journal article published July 2017.

Resource details

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Contributed by: WE-R NHS (Workforce and Education Research NHS)
Authored by: Malcolm Johnston
Derek Covill
Nicholas Tollemache
Claire F. Smith
Licence: More information on licences
Last updated: 30 April 2024
First contributed: 06 October 2023
Audience access level: General user

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