BMJ  2008;336:1250 (31 May), doi:10.1136/bmj.39583.596111.94

Views & Reviews

The case for resurrecting the long case

Narci C Teoh, senior lecturer in medicine1, Francis J Bowden, professor of medicine1

1 Australian National University Medical School at The Canberra Hospital, Canberra

Correspondence to: F J Bowden frank.bowden@act.gov.au

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Reports of the death of the long case as a tool for assessing medical students’ clinical skills may be greatly exaggerated.1 Unfortunately, the unintended consequence of highlighting its poor inter-case reliability is that even the judicious use of the long case may be seen as being out of touch with modern educational practice. In the ongoing struggle to improve the reliability of our assessment of students, we may forget that knowing that a student will be examined in a particular way determines that student’s learning behaviour.

Firstly, a definition: at our school a long case is where a student sees a real patient in a clinical setting, takes a history, examines the patient, makes a diagnosis, formulates a management plan, and then presents this information and discusses the issues arising from the case with a clinical tutor. Each long case is marked against a set of criteria and graded. Students . . . [Full text of this article]


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