Excited for OSCEs |
The OSCEs were one of my first duties as a lecturer at KCN. Amber,
a fellow GHSP volunteer, traveled down with KCN Lilongwe to partake in the OSCE
fun. For this session of OSCEs, we were grading all 250 of the second year
students. This is quite the production with lecturers from both campuses of KCN
and several master’s students.
Amber and I donning our lecturer uniforms (I'm rocking the Hopkins pins!) |
The first day, the students were tested on urinary catheter
care and colostomy care. We had 20 stations set-up- 10 for each scenario. The
second day, we were testing insulin administration, and thankfully, were able
to have all 20 stations dedicated to this task. The students were given a
scenario, for example: Mr. Basi is a diabetic who is on 10 units of soluble
insulin daily. They were then responsible for demonstrating the procedure to
administer insulin to Mr. Basi including proper documentation. As the
examiners, we had a checklist in order to grade the student’s performance with
two examiners per student. Each student was allotted 10 minutes to complete the
procedure. We held the OSCEs at the Kameza campus, which was recently built,
but the process of transferring the bachelor’s classes/students to this campus
has not been completed. I heard there was an internet issue, but that is
probably only part of the story. It is a beautiful campus located approximately
20-30 minutes outside of the center of Blantyre.
Kameza campus of KCN |
Here is how the first (and longest) day of OSCEs went:
6:50 AM- Picked-up
by KCN Lilongwe bus at my house. Make 2-3 more stops in Blantyre to pick-up
other Lilongwe faculty.
7:45 AM-
Arrive at Kameza campus and proceed to unload many of the supplies needed for
the OSCEs.
7:55 AM-
Realize that there is a lot of set-up needed before we can start. Proceed to
wander around the campus looking for photo ops with Amber (see below for
results).
8:30 AM-
Wander back to the OSCE room and arrive just in time for the meeting to discuss
the process.
8:45 AM-
Divide into groups with two examiners per curtained-off station.
8:55 AM- Meet
with everyone grading our scenario- urinary catheter care. Read the scenario
and the grading sheet, and discuss proposed changes.
9:00 AM- Head
back to our stations and await the first group of students.
9:10 AM-
Grade the first set of two students.
9:35 AM- Meet
again to discuss how the first set went. Discuss some more about the grading
sheet, but make no changes.
9:45 AM- Grade
more students.
11:45 AM- Tea
time!!!
12:00 PM-
Grade more students.
1:30 PM-
Lunch
2:00 PM-
Grade the rest of the students.
4:45 PM- Tea
time.
5:00 PM- Head
home.
Here is what
would happen during a typical OSCE:
The student waits outside to be told
to enter the area. When instructed, the student enters the room and is given 1
minute to read the scenario. A bell rings, which signifies the start of the 9
minutes. The student comes to the bedside of the “patient”, introduces
themselves (usually in Chichewa), informs the patient of the procedure, and
obtains consent. The next step is to provide privacy. In America, this is
implied as our hospital rooms are set-up to already be either private or
semi-private. In Malawi, there are sometimes 8 or more patients in a room (if
there is a room) and no curtains. This was the one step in the checklist that I
found most interesting. The student then continues the procedure describing the
process to the “patient” (in English thanks to my fellow examiner). When the
students finish (and hopefully after remembering to wash hands again), they
document the procedure. Then, the bell rings again signifying for the student
to leave and the examiners to finish grading.
The full lecturer uniform |
View from campus |
Student dorm |
2 comments :
Thank you, thank you, thank you for your interesting blog entries. It really helps me visualize what your role is in Malawi and your life style. I am so happy that you are realizing your dreams and goals and helping so many people in the process.
Hi Mandy. Ditto your Mom!
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