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Teaching biostatistics to undergraduate Saudi medical students
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Journal of Applied & Computational Mathematics

ISSN: 2168-9679

Open Access

Teaching biostatistics to undergraduate Saudi medical students


4th International Conference and Exhibition on Biometrics & Biostatistics

November 16-18, 2015 San Antonio, USA

Ahmed A Bahnassy

King Fahad Medical City College of Medicine, Saudi Arabia

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Appl Computat Math

Abstract :

Background: The knowledge and ability to use biostatistical techniques have become increasingly important in management of data and interpretation of results of different studies related to health sciences. Understanding biostatistical methods may improve clinical thinking, decision making, evaluations, medical research and evidence based healthcare. Unfortunately, there is an increasing gap between medical students and mathematical notations usually part-and-parcel of medical and biostatistics. Lack of connection between medical curricula and introductory courses in statistics has negative attitude among medical students. This study is aimed at evaluating the effect of a new teaching method (which is based on a mix of theoretical concepts and its applications using computer facilities) in teaching biostatistics to undergraduate medical students in a Saudi Faculty of Medicine, and to measure the students� ability to understand the results of the statistical tests of the computer output and interpret them in meaningful texts. Methods: A new method of teaching biostatistics based on teaching theoretical concepts and application of the lectures using a real clinical dataset using PC-SPSS software. The results of this new teaching method were compared to the conventional method (based on lectures and scientific calculations) in two classes in two academic years. Results: Students in the two classes were 114 students; each class had 57 students. The new method�s class scored significantly higher than those who were taught using the traditional method in the following topics: measures of variability, confidence intervals testing hypothesis, t-test, Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), multiple linear regression and data presentations. Writing and interpreting the results showed borderline statistical difference between the two methods. Mean satisfaction scores for the students toward biostatistics were significantly higher for the new method than the traditional one (p<0.05). Conclusion: Teaching biostatistics for medical students should avoid calculations. Using computer software is recommended for analysis of real medical data.

Biography :

Ahmed A Bahnassy has completed his PhD from Tulane University. He is a Professor of Biostatistics and Medical Research in College of Medicine, King Fahad Medical City, Saudi Arabia. He has published more than 130 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as a Referee of 6 repute journals.

Email: abahnassy@hotmail.com

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1282

Journal of Applied & Computational Mathematics received 1282 citations as per Google Scholar report

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