Tuesday, March 27, 2007

LiveScience.com: "iPods Help Doctors Recognize Heart Problems"


article originally posted in LiveScience.com

Doctors can greatly improve their stethoscope skills and therefore their ability to diagnose heart problems by listening repeatedly to heartbeats on their iPods.

Previous research has shown that the average rate of correct heart sound identification by physicians is 40 percent.

In a new study, 149 general internists listened 400 times to five common heart murmurs during a 90-minute session with iPods. After the session, the average score improved to 80 percent.

Proficiency with a stethoscope—and the ability to recognize abnormal heart sounds—is a critical skill for identifying dangerous heart conditions and minimizing dependence on expensive medical tests, said lead researcher Dr. Michael Barrett, clinical associate professor of medicine and cardiologist at Temple University School of Medicine and Hospital. "It's important to know when to order a costly echocardiogram or stress test," Barrett said.

Barrett believes the skill of learning heart problems is best learned through intensive drilling and repetition, not by traditional methods, usually a classroom lecture or demonstration in medical school and then on the job.

"You don't build this proficiency by osmosis," Barrett said.

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My take:
Wow! That's nice. It really is true. Both seeing and hearing clinical applications would really make it easier for medical students to more or less understand these things, aside from just memorizing everything from the book. And also let's not forget the applications of the things we have learned. ;) Seeing, hearing, and doing, not one less. As quoted by Dr. King in one of his lecture on the Special Senses Physiology: "I hear and I forget, I see and I remember, I do and I understand."

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