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Comparison of the effect of and exposure on cadaveric anxiety among first year medical and nursing students. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Human anatomy instruction primarily uses cadaver dissection, which can lead to significant anxiety and discomfort among health science students.
  • A study conducted with 127 medical and nursing students evaluated the impact of video demonstrations compared to direct exposure to cadaver dissection on anxiety levels and attitudes towards death.
  • Results indicated that video demonstrations reduced anxiety but did not change feelings of disgust or attitudes towards death, highlighting the need for better coping strategies in anatomy education.

Article Abstract

Background: Human anatomy instruction is mostly focused on cadaver dissection and prosected specimen examination. Exposure to cadaver dissection can be a stressful experience that may cause a wide variety of symptoms among students of health sciences. To compare and evaluate the effect of and exposure on cadaveric anxiety, disgust propensity and sensitivity, and attitude toward death and dying among 1-year medical and nursing students.

Materials And Methods: An open-label randomized trial (matched-control experimental design) was conducted among 127 1-year Medical and Nursing students from a selected Institute of National Importance, Bhopal, India during 2015. The participants were divided into an experimental and control group based on matched trait anxiety scores using the Trait Anxiety Inventory. Followed by preassessment, video demonstration with cadaver dissection ( exposure) was then administered to the experimental group, while the control group had direct exposure to cadaver dissection ( exposure).

Results: The study showed that there was a statistically significant difference in state anxiety related to cadaver dissection in the experimental group ( = 0.01). However, video-demonstration of cadaver dissection did not have any effect on disgust propensity and sensitivity and attitude toward death and dying.

Conclusion: The findings provided evidence that video-demonstration of cadaver dissection reduced anxiety, although it did not have any effect on disgust and attitudes of death. The dissection hall experience may evoke feelings of anxiety and disgust that need to be addressed through advanced preparedness and coping strategies, especially among medical and nursing students.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9093633PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jehp.jehp_368_21DOI Listing

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