# Virtual Reality in Training and Assessment Among Clinical Students and Lecturers at a Nigerian University: A Phenomenological Study

**Authors:** Abiola Olubusola Komolafe, Omotade Adebimpe Ijarotimi, Oluseye Ademola Okunola, Olufemi Mayowa Adetutu, Ayodeji Oludola Oluwatope, Olatunde Abiona, Ojo Melvin Agunbiade, Adeboye Titus Ayinde, Stephen Babatunde Aregbesola, Olawale Babatunde Akinwale, Babatope Ayodeji Kolawole, Lanre Idowu, Alaba Adeyemi Adediwura, Olayinka Donald Otuyemi

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/75021 · JMIR Medical Education · 2026-01-26

## TL;DR

This study explores how virtual reality is used to train and assess clinical students and lecturers in Nigeria, finding it enhances learning and confidence but raises concerns about empathy.

## Contribution

The study introduces VTRACS, a VR model for clinical training and assessment in a Nigerian university context.

## Key findings

- VR is seen as an engaging and effective supplement to traditional clinical training methods.
- Participants noted VR's benefits in skill acquisition, confidence, and reducing clinical errors.
- Concerns were raised about VR potentially reducing empathy and the need to address cost and technology challenges.

## Abstract

Virtual reality (VR) technology is increasingly used in health care professionals’ education as a novel tool for teaching, learning, and assessment.

This study explored the experiences of clinical students and lecturers with VR for training and assessment at a Nigerian institution. It also explored students’ perceptions of the usefulness of VR in improving their clinical abilities, knowledge retention, engagement, and overall learning experience.

A qualitative research study was conducted among 24 clinical students and 8 clinical lecturers. A developed Virtual reality model to TRain and Assess Clinical Students (VTRACS) was used to train and assess clinical students using clinical scenarios. Data were collected through 4 focus group discussions conducted among the clinical students and 8 in-depth interviews conducted among the clinical lecturers. Trustworthiness was maintained, and ethical approval for the study was obtained. The focus group discussions and in-depth interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using NVivo (version 11; QSR International).

Many of the participants had no previous experience with VR in teaching and learning activities, but judging from their engagement with VTRACS, they defined VR as an alternative learning method (alternative to the traditional physical method). Major themes emerging from the study were expression of excitement, simple and useful innovation, proficiency enhancement, challenges with innovation, and uniformity. The clinical students adjudged VTRACS as an educational supplement with a feeling of unlimited learning access, enhancing clinical abilities while positively impacting their confidence and reducing clinical errors. The participants also described the objectivity and standardization of clinical scenarios as drivers of uniformity in training and assessment of clinical students. The participants were, however, concerned about the loss of empathy with the use of VTRACS, which may negatively impact the affective domain of learning.

The use of VR in the teaching and assessment of clinical students at a Nigerian university is perceived as a complementary method of learning that increases skill acquisition, provides unlimited access to training, and enhances proficiency. While VR is considered to be engaging and beneficial to health care professionals’ education, there is a need for its effective incorporation into clinical courses and mitigation of challenges such as cost and technology to ensure the realization of the full potential of VR in health care professionals’ education.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), motion sickness (MESH:D009041), IDIs (MESH:D007222), Loss of empathy (MESH:D016388), headache (MESH:D006261), dizziness (MESH:D004244), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382), appendicitis (MESH:D001064), pregnancy (MESH:D011254)
- **Chemicals:** VTRACS (-)
- **Species:** Symbiodinium sp. Ba (species) [taxon 230989], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12887560/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12887560