看一遍,自学一遍,做一遍:全球外科教育自学培训和评估的障碍与机遇

IF 1.4 Q3 SURGERY
Olubunmi A. Fariyike , Jacqueline Yao , Mehdi Baqri , Peggy Liao , Catherine Mohr , George Korir , Taseer Feroze Din , Adam L. Kushner , Sherry M. Wren
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的我们旨在根据学科专家的意见,确定在外科教育中实施自我管理培训和评估的最主要障碍。根据这些发现,我们采用设计思维来探索可能的干预措施,并为克服所发现的障碍制定了一套变革理论。具体来说,实施的重点是扩大中低收入国家(LMIC)准临床医师(ACs)的外科技能。研究方法 对来自美国、南美、东非和西非的 10 名外科医生、教育工作者和工程师领域专家进行了定性研究。受访者是通过有目的的滚雪球式抽样选出的,直到主题饱和为止。半结构式访谈通过视频会议或面对面的方式进行。对开放式回答进行了综合、编码,并用于确定在低资源环境中推广基于模拟的学习和自我管理的培训与评估的主要障碍。结果我们确定了广泛实施自控培训和评估的四大障碍:证明自控培训后提供的外科护理的安全性和质量;验证自控培训和评估的原则;将模拟技能转化为外科知识;以及融入现有的任务转移和任务分担的法律环境中。 讨论提高低收入国家和地区的外科能力是一项迫切需求,可以通过为助理医师精心设计的自控培训和评估来扩大这一需求。实施过程将因当地文化和法规而异,但有赖于由当地拥护者组成的国际团体首先提供支持该技术实用性的共同证据,然后在当地激发将该技术融入现有系统的热情。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
See one, teach yourself one, do one: Barriers and opportunities in self-administered training and assessment for global surgical education

Objective

We aimed to determine the most important perceived barriers to the implementation of self-administered training and assessment in surgical education according to subject matter experts. With these findings, design thinking was used to explore possible interventions and develop a theory of change for overcoming identified barriers. Specifically, implementation was focused on expanding the surgical skills of associate clinicians (ACs) in low-to-middle-income countries (LMICs).

Methods

A qualitative study with 10 field experts representing surgeons, educators, and engineers from the US, South America, and East and West Africa was conducted. Interviewees were selected through purposeful snowball sampling until thematic saturation. Semi-structured interviews were conducted over video conference or in-person. Open-ended responses were synthesized, coded, and used to identify key barriers for scaling simulation-based learning and self-administered training and assessment in low-resource settings.

Results

We identified four major barriers to widespread implementation of self-administered training and assessment: demonstration of the safety and quality of surgical care provided after self-administered training; validation of the principle of self-administered training and assessment; translation of simulation skills to surgical knowledge; and integration into existing task shifting and task sharing legal landscapes.

Discussion

Increasing surgical capacity in LMICs is an urgent need that could be expanded with carefully developed self-administered training and assessment for ACs. The implementation process will be variable depending on local culture and regulations but is dependent on an international community of local champions to first produce a common body of evidence supporting the technology's utility and then to generate local excitement for its integration into existing systems.
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CiteScore
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