Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance

Andre S Alves,1,* Victor Taramarcaz,1,* Bernard Cerutti,1 Stephane Genevay,2 Eduardo Schiffer,3 Noelle Junod Perron1,4 1Unit of Development and Research in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland; 2Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Geneva Uni...

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Main Authors: Alves AS, Taramarcaz V, Cerutti B, Genevay S, Schiffer E, Junod Perron N
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2025-08-01
Series:Advances in Medical Education and Practice
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Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/near-peer-training-impact-of-a-single-session-on-students-osce-perform-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-AMEP
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author Alves AS
Taramarcaz V
Cerutti B
Genevay S
Schiffer E
Junod Perron N
author_facet Alves AS
Taramarcaz V
Cerutti B
Genevay S
Schiffer E
Junod Perron N
author_sort Alves AS
collection DOAJ
description Andre S Alves,1,* Victor Taramarcaz,1,* Bernard Cerutti,1 Stephane Genevay,2 Eduardo Schiffer,3 Noelle Junod Perron1,4 1Unit of Development and Research in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland; 2Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland; 3Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology, Intensive Care Unit and Emergency, Faculty of Medicine and Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland; 4Medical Directory, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Noelle Junod Perron, Unit of Development and Research in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Rue Michel-Servet 1- CMU 5-6, Geneva, CH, 1206, Switzerland, Email noelle.junod@hug.chPurpose: Near-Peer Training (NPT) is increasingly used to teach clinical and procedural skills during undergraduate medical education. The impact of NPT programs on clinical practice is usually measured through OSCE stations that assess the trained skills. Little is known about the impact of a single NPT session on students’ performance in OSCEs. This study aims to assess the impact of a single clinical skill NPT session on students’ overall objective performance at a summative OSCE.Patients and Methods: This prospective study evaluated the impact of a two-hour NPT session focused on three system-related clinical situations on overall clinical performance. Third-year medical students (junior) practiced these specific clinical skills under the supervision of fourth–sixth year student tutors with students rotating roles as clinician, observer, or patient. Scores (0– 100) at the 3rd year summative OSCE served as indicators of objective performance.Results: In 2022 and 2023, 210 out of 325 junior students underwent the NPT, with 50 tutors recruited for instruction. NPT participants significantly outperformed non-participants in the summative OSCE, with higher mean scores in global assessment (80.01± 7.64 vs 74.58± 6.71, p< 0.0001), communication (83.39± 8.99 vs 79.70± 10.10, p=0.0011), medical history taking (77.31± 8.93 vs 73.28± 9.59, p=0.0006), and physical examination (73.52± 10.66 vs 68.30± 10.37, p< 0.0001). However, there was no evidence of specific performance improvement in OSCE stations related to the trained system related clinical situations (effect of − 0.0119± 0.0598 on the normalized scores; p=0.8428).Conclusion: A single NPT session improved junior students’ general performance but not scores related to the trained clinical situations at a summative OSCE. More research is warranted to understand what really boosts student learning since NPT seems to be effective, independently of the clinical skills specifically trained.Keywords: near-peer, OSCE, transfer, medical students, clinical skills
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spelling doaj-art-67b64b67b06d4bfab0ff6efc68b72aea2025-08-24T17:31:58ZengDove Medical PressAdvances in Medical Education and Practice1179-72582025-08-01Volume 16Issue 115211527106074Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE PerformanceAlves AS0Taramarcaz V1Cerutti B2Genevay S3Schiffer E4Junod Perron N5Faculty of MedicineFaculty of MedicineFaculty of MedicineFaculty of MedicineFaculty of MedicineFaculty of MedicineAndre S Alves,1,* Victor Taramarcaz,1,* Bernard Cerutti,1 Stephane Genevay,2 Eduardo Schiffer,3 Noelle Junod Perron1,4 1Unit of Development and Research in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland; 2Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland; 3Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology, Intensive Care Unit and Emergency, Faculty of Medicine and Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland; 4Medical Directory, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Noelle Junod Perron, Unit of Development and Research in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Rue Michel-Servet 1- CMU 5-6, Geneva, CH, 1206, Switzerland, Email noelle.junod@hug.chPurpose: Near-Peer Training (NPT) is increasingly used to teach clinical and procedural skills during undergraduate medical education. The impact of NPT programs on clinical practice is usually measured through OSCE stations that assess the trained skills. Little is known about the impact of a single NPT session on students’ performance in OSCEs. This study aims to assess the impact of a single clinical skill NPT session on students’ overall objective performance at a summative OSCE.Patients and Methods: This prospective study evaluated the impact of a two-hour NPT session focused on three system-related clinical situations on overall clinical performance. Third-year medical students (junior) practiced these specific clinical skills under the supervision of fourth–sixth year student tutors with students rotating roles as clinician, observer, or patient. Scores (0– 100) at the 3rd year summative OSCE served as indicators of objective performance.Results: In 2022 and 2023, 210 out of 325 junior students underwent the NPT, with 50 tutors recruited for instruction. NPT participants significantly outperformed non-participants in the summative OSCE, with higher mean scores in global assessment (80.01± 7.64 vs 74.58± 6.71, p< 0.0001), communication (83.39± 8.99 vs 79.70± 10.10, p=0.0011), medical history taking (77.31± 8.93 vs 73.28± 9.59, p=0.0006), and physical examination (73.52± 10.66 vs 68.30± 10.37, p< 0.0001). However, there was no evidence of specific performance improvement in OSCE stations related to the trained system related clinical situations (effect of − 0.0119± 0.0598 on the normalized scores; p=0.8428).Conclusion: A single NPT session improved junior students’ general performance but not scores related to the trained clinical situations at a summative OSCE. More research is warranted to understand what really boosts student learning since NPT seems to be effective, independently of the clinical skills specifically trained.Keywords: near-peer, OSCE, transfer, medical students, clinical skillshttps://www.dovepress.com/near-peer-training-impact-of-a-single-session-on-students-osce-perform-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-AMEPNear-peerOSCEtransfermedical studentsclinical skills
spellingShingle Alves AS
Taramarcaz V
Cerutti B
Genevay S
Schiffer E
Junod Perron N
Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance
Advances in Medical Education and Practice
Near-peer
OSCE
transfer
medical students
clinical skills
title Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance
title_full Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance
title_fullStr Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance
title_full_unstemmed Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance
title_short Near-Peer Training: Impact of a Single Session on Students’ OSCE Performance
title_sort near peer training impact of a single session on students amp rsquo osce performance
topic Near-peer
OSCE
transfer
medical students
clinical skills
url https://www.dovepress.com/near-peer-training-impact-of-a-single-session-on-students-osce-perform-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-AMEP
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AT genevays nearpeertrainingimpactofasinglesessiononstudentsamprsquoosceperformance
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