卢旺达急诊医学住院医师的远程教学:有限人员的可行选择。

The East African health research journal Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-30 DOI:10.24248/eahrj.v8i3.801
Andrew Beck, Maria Isabel Diaz, Enyonam Odoom, Claudien Niyigirimbabazi, Oriane Longerstaey, Vincent Ndebwanimana, Doris Uwamahoro, Naz Karim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

非洲低收入和中等收入国家在医学教育方面面临挑战。11个国家没有医学院,24个国家共有一所医学院,很少有住院医师项目。这种短缺意味着非洲只有世界上1.7%的医生,却承担着全球27%的疾病负担。COVID-19造成了进一步的教育限制,特别是在急诊医学方面。学生和住院医生接受教育的机会有限。在疫情期间,卢旺达面临着现场EM住院教师短缺的问题,为了支持学习需求,我们设计并实施了一种远程教学模式,以替代现场教学。本研究的目的是评估远程和预先录制的教学是否被EM学习者积极接受,以及它是否在资源有限的环境中是一种可行的补充。预先录制的讲座将呈现给居民,讲师可以远程访问。我们通过定量和定性的课后调查,使用第一级Kirkpatrick框架(适用性/满意度)对课程进行评估。这项调查是由在场的居民完成的。采用描述性统计对反馈进行分析。结果测量包括学习者满意度、讲座质量、技术质量和情境适宜性。定性和自由反应数据显示,平均11名卢旺达新兴市场居民参加了18次讲座。采用李克特量表,综合学习者满意度得分为4.25 (σ = 0.1),授课质量得分为4.2 (σ = 0.1),技术质量得分为4.0 (σ = 0.36),情境适宜性得分为4.25 (σ = 0.07)。这些结果表明对讲座的总体满意度。讲师的口音和语速得分较低。定性反馈没有表现出对质量或适用性的显著不满。当没有面对面的讲师时,预先录制的远程教学方法可能是合适的替代方法。未来的方向可能包括在更大的多国队列中或在技术或资源限制更大的中低收入国家试点该项目。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remote Teaching in a Rwandan Emergency Medicine Residency: A Viable Option with Limited In-person Staff.

Low and middle-income countries (LMIC) in Africa face challenges in medical education. Eleven countries have no medical school, 24 countries share one medical school, and few have residency programs. This shortage means that Africa has only 1.7% of the world's physicians, yet bears 27% of the global disease burden. COVID-19 created further educational constraints, especially in emergency medicine (EM). Student and resident education opportunities were limited. Rwanda faced a shortage of available in-person EM residency instructors during the pandemic, and to support learning needs, we designed and implemented a remote teaching model to substitute in-person instruction. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether remote and pre-recorded teaching is positively received by EM learners and if it is a viable supplement in resource limited settings. Pre-recorded lectures were presented to residents, with lecturers remotely available. We evaluated the program using the first-level Kirkpatrick framework (suitability/satisfaction) via a quantitative and qualitative post-lecture survey. The survey was completed by residents in attendance. Responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Outcome measures included learner satisfaction, lecture quality, technological quality, and situational suitability. Qualitative and free-response data was An average of 11 Rwandan EM residents attended 18 lectures. Using a Likert scale, the composite learner satisfaction score was 4.25 (σ = 0.1), the lecture quality score was 4.2 (σ = 0.1), the technological quality score was 4.0 (σ = 0.36), and the situational suitability score was 4.25 (σ = 0.07). These results indicated overall satisfaction with the lectures. Lower scores were given regarding lecturer accents and speech rates. Qualitative feedback did not demonstrate significant dissatisfaction with quality or suitability. When in-person lecturers are unavailable, pre-recorded, remote instructional methods may be an appropriate substitute. Future directions may include piloting the project with a larger, multinational cohort or in LMICs with greater technological or resource limitations.

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