ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Effectiveness of SNAPPS in Family Medicine Residency Program

H

Hawler Medical University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Medical Education

Treatments

Other: SNAPPS Model of case presentation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06484010
SNAPPS Iraq

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this Randomized Controlled Trial is to assess how well SNAPPS (Summarize history and findings; Narrow differentials; Analyze differentials; Probe preceptor about uncertainties; Plan management; Select case-related issues for self-study) facilitates clinical reasoning and enhances time management in an outpatient setting as a learner-centered method of case presentation when compared to the conventional method among family medicine board residents and tutors, the main objectives of the study are:

  • To assess the implementation of a new technique of teaching and case presentation in family medicine residency program.
  • To understand the perception of postgraduates and tutors about this new method of case presentation.

The researchers compared the outcomes of case presentations between two groups (the SNAPPS group and the control group) using dependable variables that has been used in previous researches to assess the SNAPPS versus the traditional method of case presentation.

Participants in the SNAPPS group were introduced to the SNAPPS method by a training session, while the control group needed no intervention.

Each student had to prepare and present two cases to the assigned tutor during their routine training days.

Data were collected by the tutors during each case presentation and the participants answered survey questions regarding their opinion of the case presentation.

Full description

Clinical teaching's primary objectives include evaluating students' clinical reasoning abilities, advancing, and enhancing their development, as well as giving them clinical practice and feedback potential.

Whilst trying to assist postgraduate residents in improving their clinical reasoning, medical educators experience a variety of difficulties like uncooperative patients, record requirements, increasing tasks, time restraints, and productivity objectives that conflict with teaching time.

Students rarely convey their clinical reasoning or case-based doubts during traditional case presentations to preceptors, according to studies of such presentations. Instead, they tend to emphasize mostly on factual data However, the chance to consider one's own method of clinical thinking is seen as one of the most valuable components of the educational experience by both students and preceptors. Irby and Wilkerson have recently argued that there is a need for the development of time-effective teaching techniques in the clinical setting that give insights into the students' clinical reasoning strategies and doubts while also enabling the preceptor to stay completely involved in the priority areas of patient care.

Yonke and Foley questioned whether successful educational methods in the hospital setting would translate well to the office as medical education stepped from the inpatient to the outpatient setting.

Two models for enhancing clinical thinking ability-one-minute preceptor (OMP) and SNAPPS (Summarize history and findings; Narrow differentials; Analyze differentials; Probe preceptor about uncertainties; Plan management; Select case-related issues for self-study), have been well studied in the outpatient settings.

Additionally, by using these teaching models, preceptors can give trainees a more specific education without losing more precious time.

In the SNAPPS paradigm, the student presents a case to the preceptor by giving an informative summary of the pertinent information, which is followed by five steps that advocate for the expression of thinking and reasoning aloud. These actions are inspired in part by the rating scales for cognitive activity created by Connell et al.

The SNAPPS paradigm relies on a learner-teacher continuum which in the end, should be led by the learner, but may initially require coaching from the preceptor to assist the learner become comfortable and proficient with the processes. It is now both the trainer's and trainee's responsibility to ensure the prosperity of the learning process rather than just one of them.

To improve medical education in Family Medicine and other fields as well, we must comprehend and keep up with contemporary methodologies as they evolve in education.

The Aim of the study is to assess how well SNAPPS facilitates clinical reasoning and enhances time management in an outpatient setting when compared to conventional method of case presentation.

Enrollment

36 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Residents:

  • Postgraduate students.

  • Pursuing the board degree in Family Medicine after completion of their M.B.Ch.B and internship.

    (16 residents from the Arabic Board of Health Specialties fellowship and 14 residents from Kurdistan Board of Medical Specialties).

Preceptors

  • Tutors who worked at the department of Community and Family Medicine/ College of Medicine / Hawler Medical University.
  • Frequently instructed undergraduate and postgraduate students in the family medicine teaching health facilities.

(two assistant professors and four lecturers).

Exclusion criteria

Family Medicine residents, who are not enrolled in the Board study (not a postgraduate student)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

36 participants in 2 patient groups

SNAPPS Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
The intervention was the implementation of the SNAPPS model as a method of case presentation in out-patient settings.
Treatment:
Other: SNAPPS Model of case presentation
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
In the control group, as both learners and preceptors are familiar with the traditional method of case presentation, no special training was required.

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems