Australian medical students have fewer opportunities to do physical examination of peers of the opposite gender.
Silas TaylorBoaz ShulrufPublished in: Journal of educational evaluation for health professions (2016)
Gender is the factor of overriding importance on whether these peer interactions actually occur, such that students have fewer opportunities to examine peers of the opposite gender, particularly male students examining female peers. Student outlook has little impact. We speculate that the more acceptable PPE is to participants, paradoxically, the more complicated these interactions become, possibly with implications for future practice.