Improving Medical Students’ Confidence in Performing Mental State Examinations: A Quality Improvement Project Using Creative and Narrative Teaching Methods, Video-Based Learning, and Documentation Practice
Clara Seipt, James Anderson

TL;DR
This study shows that using creative teaching methods, videos, and documentation practice significantly boosts medical students' confidence in performing mental state exams.
Contribution
The study introduces an innovative, interactive workshop combining creative and narrative methods to enhance medical students' confidence in mental state examinations.
Findings
Students' average confidence in performing MSE increased from 56.0% to 86.8% after the workshop.
76.6% of students found the workshop extremely useful compared to previous teaching methods.
Narrative videos and documentation tasks were highlighted as key strengths by participants.
Abstract
Aims: Starting a new role as Clinical Teaching Fellows, early student feedback identified a gap between students’ academic understanding of the Mental State Examination (MSE), and confidence in its application and interpretation. Assessors recognised similar uncertainty in students regarding findings in the MSE, and a lack of confidence in presenting. This project aimed to improve medical students’ self-reported confidence in the MSE via an interactive workshop. Each PDSA cycle, we aimed to implement feedback suggestions through creative teaching methods, to improve confidence, engagement, and interaction in the MSE teaching. Methods: Year 3 and 4 medical students attended the MSE workshop during their rotation in Psychiatry. Quantitative and qualitative feedback was gathered via feedback surveys, accessible via a QR code. Using a Likert scale, students rated their confidence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Empathy and Medical Education · Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
