L
Lenin Ekpotu
Researcher at Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Publications - 5
Citations - 77
Lenin Ekpotu is an academic researcher from Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Smoking cessation & Competence (human resources). The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 34 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of medical student retention of clinical skills following simulation training.
Gozie Offiah,Lenin Ekpotu,Siobhan Murphy,Daniel Kane,Alison Gordon,Muireann O'Sullivan,Sue Faye Sharifuddin,Arnold D.K. Hill,Claire Condron +8 more
TL;DR: A curriculum with deliberate practice significantly increases the competence of students in defined clinical skills, under supervision of an engaged instructor, is a key component of the mastery model.
Journal ArticleDOI
Potential Benefits and Drawbacks of Virtual Clinics in General Surgery: Pilot Cross-Sectional Questionnaire Study.
Emily J. Rutherford,Roghinio Noray,Caolán Ó hEarráin,Kevin Quinlan,Aisling Hegarty,Lenin Ekpotu,Chinedum Arize,Fiyinfoluwa Fabamwo,Abdulaziz Alrubaiaan,Avinash Bhupalan,Abdulla Alshehhi,Colm Power,Arnold David Konrad Hill +12 more
TL;DR: A pilot study of the feasibility, benefits, and drawbacks of a virtual clinic in the general surgical service of a busy tertiary center found that VCs offer a viable alternative to traditional OPD.
Journal ArticleDOI
Determining rates of smoking cessation advice delivered during hospitalisation and smoking cessation rates 3 months post discharge: a two-hospital survey.
Lisa Mellon,Noel G. McElvaney,Liam Cormican,Anne Hickey,Ronan M. Conroy,Lenin Ekpotu,Oroghene Oghenejobo,Samar Atteih,Ronan McDonnell,Frank Doyle +9 more
TL;DR: These findings, along with low dependence scores, suggest that systematic provision of low-intensity cessation interventions could significantly enhance quit rates in hospitalised smokers.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
SC29 Evaluation of medical student retention and transferability of clinical skills following simulation teaching
TL;DR: What procedural skill performance look like at fixed periods of time elapse in an undergraduate medical program is defined to define what re-training is required to restore decayed performance.
Journal Article
The delivery of smoking cessation advice to hospitalised smokers: a two-hospital survey
Lisa Mellon,Noel G. McElvaney,Liam Cormican,Anne Hickey,Ronán Michael Conroy,Lenin Ekpotu,O. Oghenjobo,Samar Atteih,Frank Doyle +8 more
TL;DR: Where advice was given, it was associated with enhanced motivation to quit and increased quit rates, suggesting that systematic provision of low-intensity cessation interventions could significantly enhance quit rates in hospitalised smokers.