Biomedical Education
Simulations
Baillie S,
Mellor DJ, Brewster SA & Reid SWJ. Integrating a bovine rectal palpation
simulator into an undergraduate veterinary curriculum. JVME
2005; 32(1): 79-85. Download
(1.72 mb).
ABSTRACT
There are problems associated with teaching bovine rectal palpation to
undergraduate veterinary students. The students need opportunities to
examine enough cows to develop the required skills, but increasing student
numbers and limitations on access to cows have made this more and more
difficult to achieve. A virtual reality–based teaching tool, the Bovine
Rectal Palpation Simulator, has been developed as a supplement to existing
training methods. The student palpates computer
generated virtual models of the bovine reproductive tract while interacting
with a haptic (touch feedback) device. During training sessions, the
instructor follows the student’s actions inside the virtual cow on the
computer screen and gives instruction. A trial integration of the simulator
into the fourth-year bovine reproduction course was undertaken at the
University of Glasgow Veterinary School during the 2003/2004 academic year.
Students were offered two training sessions, and feedback was gathered using
questionnaires. In the first session, all students were taught a range of
basic skills using a standardized teaching protocol. The second training
session was customized to each student’s learning needs and included
practice in dealing with a range of on-farm scenarios. Student feedback
indicated that the training had been useful for learning various aspects of
bovine rectal palpation and provided information that helped in the further
development of the simulator as a teaching tool.