The effectiveness of gynaecological teaching associates in teaching pelvic examination: a systematic review and meta‐analysis
review
OA: closed
CC0
Abstract
CONTEXT: An increasing number of graduating students are unable to competently and confidently perform a pelvic examination. Gynaecology teaching associates (GTAs) teach technical and communication skills and offer immediate feedback. The objective was to perform a systematic literature review to assess whether teaching pelvic examinations using real women who are trained to give instructions on technique and feedback improves the competence, confidence and communication skills of trainees when compared with traditional teaching methods. METHODS: MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL and the ISRCTN Register of Clinical Trials were searched using selected terminology. No language restrictions were applied. The selection criteria were randomised clinical trials (RCTs) and controlled studies that investigated the use of GTAs to teach students or health-related professionals the pelvic examination. Data evaluating study outcomes, along with methodological details, were extracted in duplicate. The outcomes measured were: self-reported confidence, assessed competence and assessed communication skills. The standard mean difference (SMD) was derived for each study where possible and heterogeneity across studies was quantified using the I(2) statistic. In the presence of substantial variation, the data were pooled using a random effects model. RESULTS: Eleven studies with 856 participants were included: five RCTs and six observational studies. GTA training improved competence compared with other teaching methods and the finding of enhanced competence was consistent when the pooled analysis was restricted to RCTs. Communication skills were also improved with GTA teaching, but to a lesser degree, whereas no effect on student confidence was observed. Statistical heterogeneity was present for all outcomes when data were pooled. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that GTA-based teaching of pelvic examination is associated with improvement in the competence and communication skills of trainees. However, further larger-scale studies with standardised relevant educational outcomes are needed to confirm these findings.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
Citation neighborhood (no data yet)
We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. The paper's references may be in our DB but unresolved to ``paper_id`` (resolution happens at ingest when the cited DOI matches a row we already have). Run the cross-source citation reconcile pass to retry.
References (23)
- W1533574046 via openalex
- W1539447415 via openalex
- W1541658601 via openalex
- W1549071401 via openalex
- W1983849268 via openalex
- W1987262891 via openalex
- W1988604306 via openalex
- W1989065783 via openalex
- W1995826664 via openalex
- W2007443567 via openalex
- W2019412498 via openalex
- W2029553570 via openalex
- W2033704966 via openalex
- W2034318991 via openalex
- W2073801818 via openalex
- W2074932197 via openalex
- W2144054144 via openalex
- W2165220422 via openalex
- W2414937186 via openalex
- W2461226777 via openalex
- W6649272838 via openalex
- W6654952641 via openalex
- W6669418170 via openalex
Source provenance
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-04T00:00:01.174412+00:00
License: CC0
· commercial use OK