6 A national survey of the current provisions, perceptions and challenges regarding digital health education in the UK medical undergraduate curriculum

Nishita Gadi, M. Utukuri, B. Osei-Boadu, Y. Aung, E. Le, A. Deighton, C. Dibblin, M. Ferry, F. D'Souza, J. Hirniak, B. Agboola, M. Abedi, A. Axiaq, C. Chand, C. Patel, M. Pitt, B. Harris, M. Byrne, R. Sethi
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However, there are no national standards on DH education for UK medical students. Consequently, this study sought to assess the current provisions, perceptions and challenges regarding DH education in the undergraduate medical curriculum.MethodsAn anonymous cross-sectional online survey was developed following a literature search and by collecting iterative feedback from both researchers and external collaborators. The survey consisted of questions in 6 areas: (a) understanding of DH;(b) existing provision of DH education;(c) interest in DH education;(d) preferred means of delivering and assessing DH education;(e) impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on DH;and (f) demographic information.The survey was administered via Qualtrics from March to October 2021, and disseminated to UK medical students via university mailing lists, social media and student representatives. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected pertaining to demographics, attitudes, preferences, and current provisions regarding DH education. Qualitative responses underwent thematic analysis. For quantitative analysis, R (version 3.5.0) and R Studio (version 1.1a) were used.Results514 complete responses were received from 39 UK medical schools in 2021. 57.2% of respondents were female, with a mean age of 22.9 ± 3.2. 65.8% of students considered DH ‘extremely important’ to future clinical practice, particularly the domains of electronic patient records, telehealth and smartphone applications. However, only 18.1% felt aware of the DH competencies required in clinical medicine. 70.2% of students reported receiving some DH education, with the highest proportion being in the form of lectures or seminars (30.5%, n=157), e-learning modules (28.6%, n=147) and ad hoc teaching during clinical placements (22.8%, n=117). However, only 25.7% felt satisfied with these provisions. Themes for student satisfaction related to a practical teaching approach, delivery of content appropriate for their training stage and coverage of topics in student interest. Conversely, student dissatisfaction originated from inadequate teaching, and subsequent fears of falling behind. 56.1% preferred DH education to be mandatory rather than elective, ideally through hands-on workshops (75.8%) and lectures and seminars (60.4%). 65.4% thought DH proficiency should be assessed in some capacity, of which 75.6% preferred formative assessment.ConclusionThis study represents the first national survey of UK medical students on DH education. Overwhelmingly, the results indicate that medical students recognise the significance of DH and would appreciate better formal integration into their curriculum;which is supported by previous similar studies in the literature. This study also identified how students would prefer to be taught and assessed on DH, in particular that they would prefer it be mandatory yet remain formative at present. Given the increasing ubiquity of DH in clinical practice, it is therefore crucial that universities and wider medical education organisations work to improve and standardise DH education, to better prepare medical students to adapt to the continuously developing digital landscape. This rings especially true in light of the recent COVID-19 pandemic which has highlighted the quintessential nature of DH to medical practice. Our intended future research from this study includes undergraduate focus groups for greater qualitative depth of information, and Delphi panels from wider medical education stakeholders into what should be included in DH education, with the eventual goal of devel ping a comprehensive and standardised national DH curriculum.","PeriodicalId":116980,"journal":{"name":"Part I: ePapers","volume":"3 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Part I: ePapers","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjhci-2022-fciasc.6","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

ObjectiveDigital health (DH) is the integration of technologies to tackle challenges in healthcare. Its applications include mobile health, remote & wireless healthcare, artificial intelligence, and robotics. Digital technologies are increasingly being used to deliver routine care, whilst simultaneously patients are increasing their uptake of DH solutions (e.g. wearables).With the adoption of DH increasing across the NHS, there is a growing need for a digitally literate workforce. However, there are no national standards on DH education for UK medical students. Consequently, this study sought to assess the current provisions, perceptions and challenges regarding DH education in the undergraduate medical curriculum.MethodsAn anonymous cross-sectional online survey was developed following a literature search and by collecting iterative feedback from both researchers and external collaborators. The survey consisted of questions in 6 areas: (a) understanding of DH;(b) existing provision of DH education;(c) interest in DH education;(d) preferred means of delivering and assessing DH education;(e) impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on DH;and (f) demographic information.The survey was administered via Qualtrics from March to October 2021, and disseminated to UK medical students via university mailing lists, social media and student representatives. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected pertaining to demographics, attitudes, preferences, and current provisions regarding DH education. Qualitative responses underwent thematic analysis. For quantitative analysis, R (version 3.5.0) and R Studio (version 1.1a) were used.Results514 complete responses were received from 39 UK medical schools in 2021. 57.2% of respondents were female, with a mean age of 22.9 ± 3.2. 65.8% of students considered DH ‘extremely important’ to future clinical practice, particularly the domains of electronic patient records, telehealth and smartphone applications. However, only 18.1% felt aware of the DH competencies required in clinical medicine. 70.2% of students reported receiving some DH education, with the highest proportion being in the form of lectures or seminars (30.5%, n=157), e-learning modules (28.6%, n=147) and ad hoc teaching during clinical placements (22.8%, n=117). However, only 25.7% felt satisfied with these provisions. Themes for student satisfaction related to a practical teaching approach, delivery of content appropriate for their training stage and coverage of topics in student interest. Conversely, student dissatisfaction originated from inadequate teaching, and subsequent fears of falling behind. 56.1% preferred DH education to be mandatory rather than elective, ideally through hands-on workshops (75.8%) and lectures and seminars (60.4%). 65.4% thought DH proficiency should be assessed in some capacity, of which 75.6% preferred formative assessment.ConclusionThis study represents the first national survey of UK medical students on DH education. Overwhelmingly, the results indicate that medical students recognise the significance of DH and would appreciate better formal integration into their curriculum;which is supported by previous similar studies in the literature. This study also identified how students would prefer to be taught and assessed on DH, in particular that they would prefer it be mandatory yet remain formative at present. Given the increasing ubiquity of DH in clinical practice, it is therefore crucial that universities and wider medical education organisations work to improve and standardise DH education, to better prepare medical students to adapt to the continuously developing digital landscape. This rings especially true in light of the recent COVID-19 pandemic which has highlighted the quintessential nature of DH to medical practice. Our intended future research from this study includes undergraduate focus groups for greater qualitative depth of information, and Delphi panels from wider medical education stakeholders into what should be included in DH education, with the eventual goal of devel ping a comprehensive and standardised national DH curriculum.
对英国医学本科课程中关于数字健康教育的现行规定、看法和挑战的全国性调查
目的数字健康(DH)是解决医疗保健挑战的技术集成。它的应用包括移动医疗、远程和无线医疗、人工智能和机器人技术。数字技术越来越多地用于提供常规护理,同时患者也越来越多地采用卫生保健解决方案(例如可穿戴设备)。随着NHS越来越多地采用DH,对数字文化劳动力的需求也越来越大。然而,英国医科学生的卫生保健教育没有国家标准。因此,本研究旨在评估本科医学课程中关于卫生保健教育的现行规定、观念和挑战。方法通过文献检索和收集研究人员和外部合作者的反复反馈,开展了一项匿名横断面在线调查。调查包括6个范畴的问题:(a)对卫生署的认识;(b)现有的卫生署教育;(c)对卫生署教育的兴趣;(d)提供和评估卫生署教育的首选方法;(e)新冠疫情对卫生署的影响;及(f)人口资料。该调查于2021年3月至10月通过Qualtrics进行,并通过大学邮件列表、社交媒体和学生代表传播给英国医科学生。定量和定性数据收集有关人口统计,态度,偏好,以及目前有关卫生保健教育的规定。对定性答复进行专题分析。定量分析使用R(版本3.5.0)和R Studio(版本1.1a)。结果2021年共收到来自英国39所医学院的514份完整回复。女性占57.2%,平均年龄22.9±3.2岁。65.8%的学生认为卫生保健对未来的临床实践“极其重要”,特别是在电子病历、远程医疗和智能手机应用领域。然而,只有18.1%的受访者表示了解临床医学所需的卫生保健能力。70.2%的学生表示接受过一些卫生保健教育,其中以讲座或研讨会(30.5%,n=157)、电子学习模块(28.6%,n=147)和临床实习期间的特别教学(22.8%,n=117)的形式所占比例最高。然而,只有25.7%的人对这些规定感到满意。学生满意的主题与实用的教学方法、适合他们培训阶段的内容交付以及学生感兴趣的主题有关。相反,学生的不满源于教学不足,以及随之而来的对落后的恐惧。56.1%的人更倾向于强制性而非选修课,最好是通过实践工作坊(75.8%)和讲座和研讨会(60.4%)。65.4%的受访者认为应在某种程度上评估卫生署的熟练程度,其中75.6%倾向于进行形成性评估。结论本研究是首次对英国医学生的健康教育进行全国性调查。绝大多数结果表明,医学生认识到卫生保健的重要性,并希望更好地将其正式纳入他们的课程;这得到了先前文献中类似研究的支持。这项研究还确定了学生希望如何接受DH教学和评估,特别是他们希望它是强制性的,但目前仍是形成性的。鉴于卫生保健在临床实践中越来越普遍,因此,大学和更广泛的医学教育组织必须努力改善和标准化卫生保健教育,以更好地为医学生做好准备,以适应不断发展的数字环境。鉴于最近的COVID-19大流行,这一点尤其正确,它突出了卫生保健对医疗实践的典型性质。我们计划从这项研究中进行未来的研究,包括本科生焦点小组,以获得更深入的定性信息,以及来自更广泛的医学教育利益相关者的德尔菲小组,以了解卫生保健教育应该包括什么,最终目标是开发一个全面和标准化的国家卫生保健课程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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