Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.

UNLABELLED:In Indonesia, Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC) is the most frequent cancer of the head and neck region. At first presentation in the hospital most patients already have advanced NPC. Our previous study showed that general practitioners (GPs) working in Yogyakarta, Indonesia lack the knowled...

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Main Authors: Maarten A Wildeman, Renske Fles, Marlinda Adham, Ika D Mayangsari, Ilse Luirink, Mara Sandberg, Andrew D Vincent, Faiziah Fardizza, Zanil Musa, Armiyanto, Jaap M Middeldorp, Geerten Gerritsen, Ronny Suwanto, I Bing Tan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3303805?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d88e27a91f2b4a968fe69005205a57bc2020-11-25T02:45:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0173e3275610.1371/journal.pone.0032756Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.Maarten A WildemanRenske FlesMarlinda AdhamIka D MayangsariIlse LuirinkMara SandbergAndrew D VincentFaiziah FardizzaZanil MusaArmiyantoJaap M MiddeldorpGeerten GerritsenRonny SuwantoI Bing TanUNLABELLED:In Indonesia, Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC) is the most frequent cancer of the head and neck region. At first presentation in the hospital most patients already have advanced NPC. Our previous study showed that general practitioners (GPs) working in Yogyakarta, Indonesia lack the knowledge necessary for early detection of NPC. By providing training on early symptoms of NPC we hope that the diagnosis and referral will occur at an earlier stage. Here we assess the current NPC knowledge levels of GPs in Jakarta, evaluate improvement after training, compare the effectiveness of two training formats, and estimate the loss of recall over a two week period. METHODS:Two Indonesian GPs visited 31 Primary Health Care Centres (PHCCs) and provided a lecture on NPC. The alternative format consisted of a symposium at the Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, presented by local head and neck surgeons, with all GPs in the region being invited. To evaluate the effect of both formats a questionnaire was conducted before and after. RESULTS:The lecture in the PHCCs was attended by 130 GPs. Sixty-six GPs attended the training in the university hospital and 40 GPs attended both. Pre training the NPC knowledge level was poor with an average of 1.6 symptoms being correctly identified out of a potential maximum of 12, this was increased to 4.9 post training (p<0.0001). GPs attending the PHCC course recorded a greater increase in correct symptoms than those attending the symposium (3.8 vs. 2.8; p = 0.01). After a two week period the knowledge levels had declined slightly from 5.5 correctly identified symptoms to 4.2 (p = 0.25). CONCLUSION:These results confirm our findings regarding GPs insufficient knowledge of NPC. Lectures in the PHCC and a symposium have both been proven to be effective training tools in the education of GPs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3303805?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maarten A Wildeman
Renske Fles
Marlinda Adham
Ika D Mayangsari
Ilse Luirink
Mara Sandberg
Andrew D Vincent
Faiziah Fardizza
Zanil Musa
Armiyanto
Jaap M Middeldorp
Geerten Gerritsen
Ronny Suwanto
I Bing Tan
spellingShingle Maarten A Wildeman
Renske Fles
Marlinda Adham
Ika D Mayangsari
Ilse Luirink
Mara Sandberg
Andrew D Vincent
Faiziah Fardizza
Zanil Musa
Armiyanto
Jaap M Middeldorp
Geerten Gerritsen
Ronny Suwanto
I Bing Tan
Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maarten A Wildeman
Renske Fles
Marlinda Adham
Ika D Mayangsari
Ilse Luirink
Mara Sandberg
Andrew D Vincent
Faiziah Fardizza
Zanil Musa
Armiyanto
Jaap M Middeldorp
Geerten Gerritsen
Ronny Suwanto
I Bing Tan
author_sort Maarten A Wildeman
title Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.
title_short Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.
title_full Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.
title_fullStr Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.
title_full_unstemmed Short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in Jakarta, Indonesia.
title_sort short-term effect of different teaching methods on nasopharyngeal carcinoma for general practitioners in jakarta, indonesia.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description UNLABELLED:In Indonesia, Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC) is the most frequent cancer of the head and neck region. At first presentation in the hospital most patients already have advanced NPC. Our previous study showed that general practitioners (GPs) working in Yogyakarta, Indonesia lack the knowledge necessary for early detection of NPC. By providing training on early symptoms of NPC we hope that the diagnosis and referral will occur at an earlier stage. Here we assess the current NPC knowledge levels of GPs in Jakarta, evaluate improvement after training, compare the effectiveness of two training formats, and estimate the loss of recall over a two week period. METHODS:Two Indonesian GPs visited 31 Primary Health Care Centres (PHCCs) and provided a lecture on NPC. The alternative format consisted of a symposium at the Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, presented by local head and neck surgeons, with all GPs in the region being invited. To evaluate the effect of both formats a questionnaire was conducted before and after. RESULTS:The lecture in the PHCCs was attended by 130 GPs. Sixty-six GPs attended the training in the university hospital and 40 GPs attended both. Pre training the NPC knowledge level was poor with an average of 1.6 symptoms being correctly identified out of a potential maximum of 12, this was increased to 4.9 post training (p<0.0001). GPs attending the PHCC course recorded a greater increase in correct symptoms than those attending the symposium (3.8 vs. 2.8; p = 0.01). After a two week period the knowledge levels had declined slightly from 5.5 correctly identified symptoms to 4.2 (p = 0.25). CONCLUSION:These results confirm our findings regarding GPs insufficient knowledge of NPC. Lectures in the PHCC and a symposium have both been proven to be effective training tools in the education of GPs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3303805?pdf=render
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