Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Background: To determine whether osteopathic medical students, fellows, residents, and practicing physicians
differ in their ability to identify inanimate objects and if these skills relate to palpatory experience.
Methods: Fifteen commonly known objects were fixed to a board and blinded with a cotton cloth. In Part I of
testing, participants were asked to identify 9 objects, with choices provided. In Part II participants were asked to
identify 6 objects using one word only. Part III consisted of identifying the shape of an object in Part II.
Results: Eighty-nine osteopathic medical students, fellows, residents, and practicing physicians participated in the
study. Overall, correct identification of objects was higher in Part I with choices than in Part II without choices
available. No statistically significant difference was found among osteopathic medical students, fellows, residents,
and practicing physicians in the correct identification of the objects.
Conclusions: Accuracy in tactile identification of objects among varying levels of palpatory experience was not
found. Correlation with clinical palpation cannot be made as it requires a subset of palpatory skills not tested in this
study. Accuracy and measurement of palpation should be studied further to demonstrate if palpatory experience
improves palpatory accuracy.
Full text available here.