Skip to main content
Fig. 3 | BMC Medical Education

Fig. 3

From: Impact of structured reporting on developing head and neck ultrasound skills

Fig. 3

Visual analog scale (VAS) of questionnaire findings. User satisfaction of the 58 participating medical students was evaluated with a questionnaire using a visual analog scale (VAS, 10: Complete agreement, 0: Complete disagreement). Participants were asked about practicability (Q1: practicability), usefulness in everyday practice (Q2: everyday practice), improvement in report-quality (Q3: quality improvement), time-efficiency (Q4: time-efficiency), justification of additional time needed (if applicable, Q5: justif. Add. time), benefits for inexperienced physicians conducting (Q6: benefits conducting) and reporting (Q7: benefits reporting) ultrasound examinations of the head and neck, usability by intuition (Q8: intuition) and clarity of arrangement (Q9: clear arrangement) of structured reports (right side, blue bars) and free text reports (left side, red bars). The questionnaire revealed a significant preference for structured reports in all categories. * p < 0.05

Back to article page