Evaluation of the implementation of the objective structured clinical examination in health sciences education from a low‐income context in Tunisia: A cross‐sectional study
Asma Ben Amor, Hassan Farhat, Guillaume Alinier, Amina Ounallah, Olfa Bouallegue

TL;DR
This study evaluates how well OSCEs work in a low-income health sciences school in Tunisia, showing they are effective and well-received.
Contribution
The study provides evidence for the successful implementation of OSCEs in a low-income context, highlighting their efficacy compared to traditional exams.
Findings
Health sciences educators showed high satisfaction with OSCEs, while students had above-average satisfaction.
Students performed better in OSCEs compared to traditional practical examinations.
Significant differences in satisfaction and performance were found based on students' specialities.
Abstract
Objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) is well‐established and designed to evaluate students' clinical competence and practical skills in a standardized and objective manner. While OSCEs are widespread in higher‐income countries, their implementation in low‐resource settings presents unique challenges that warrant further investigation. This study aims to evaluate the perception of the health sciences students and their educators regarding deploying OSCEs within the School of Health Sciences and Techniques of Sousse (SHSTS) in Tunisia and their efficacity in healthcare education compared to traditional practical examination methods. This cross‐sectional study was conducted in June 2022, focusing on final‐year Health Sciences students at the SHSTS in Tunisia. The study participants were students and their educators involved in the OSCEs from June 6th to June 11th, 2022.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills · Primary Care and Health Outcomes
