新冠肺炎大流行期间医学教育创新的经验教训:学生对分布式培训的看法。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Rural and remote health Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-31 DOI:10.22605/RRH8257
Ruhann Botha, Danyca S Breedt, Dylan Barnard, Ian Couper
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介:新冠肺炎带来的被迫适应能否为临床教育的未来提供信息?这项研究为这个问题带来了一个低收入和中等收入国家的视角。关于新冠肺炎对医学生培训影响的大多数研究都是在高收入国家进行的,在这些国家,转换为替代虚拟或新冠肺炎友好培训平台的基础设施(在线教学或案例讨论和技能发展中心)比低收入和中等收入国家更为成熟。在南非,斯泰伦博斯大学选择将临床培训的大部分内容从传统的城市三级校区转移到较小的地区医院。本研究的主要目的是确定这些实习学生对新冠肺炎大流行期间在分布式医疗机构重组培训质量的看法,并比较农村学生与大都市(地铁)学生的看法。方法:采用REDCap调查法进行横断面研究。定量数据采用SPSS统计软件进行描述性和推理性统计分析。关联的统计显著性由p值决定。结果:共有155名受访者(62%的应答率)。尽管74.6%的参与者表示,他们开发了解决无差别问题和疾病的方法,但与大都市地区的学生相比,农村地区的学生更有可能认为他们学习了新的程序(p=0.006),并提高了执行先前学习的程序的能力(p=0.002)。农村地区的学生报告说,他们独立看的病人比以前训练时多(p结论:新冠肺炎大流行为继续进行高质量的医疗培训带来了挑战。它也为创新变革提供了机会。这项研究证明了分布式现场培训的成功成果,即使在大流行期间,学生们也沉浸在医疗团队中,负责患者管理,并报告他们改善了自己的任务疾病。农村地区的学生往往对他们的临床培训持更积极的看法。这项研究中的学生们没有将疫情的结束视为恢复以前现状的时刻,而是向我们建议,从分布式学习的这种强制性创新中吸取的教训现在可以为未来的临床教育提供更好的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lessons from innovation in medical education during the COVID-19 pandemic: student perspectives on distributed training.

Introduction: Can the forced adaptation brought about by COVID-19 inform the future of clinical education? This study brings a low- and middle-income country perspective to this question. Most studies of the impact of COVID-19 on medical students' training have been conducted in high-income countries, where the infrastructure to convert to alternative virtual or COVID-19-friendly training platforms (online teaching or case discussions and skill development centres) is more established than in low- and middle-income countries. In South Africa, Stellenbosch University instead chose to move substantial components of clinical training away from the traditional city tertiary campus and into smaller district hospitals. The main objective of this study was to ascertain the perspectives of these student interns regarding the quality of their restructured training at distributed health facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic and compare the perspectives of rural-site students with those of metropolitan (metro)-site students.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted by REDCap survey. Quantitative data were analysed by SPSS Statistics by doing descriptive and inferential statistics. The statistical significance of associations was determined by a p-value of <0.05. Likert-scale questions were analysed as ordinal variables to determine distribution of the responses, and non-parametric Mann-Whitney tests were used to compare distributions between rural and metro groups. Qualitative questions were analysed thematically by identifying common themes. Ethical approval was obtained for the study.

Results: There were 155 respondents (62% response rate). Although 74.6% of participants indicated that they developed approaches to undifferentiated problems and illnesses, rural-site students were more likely to perceive that they learnt new procedures (p=0.006) and improved their ability to perform procedures previously learnt (p=0.002) compared to metro-site students. Rural-site students reported that they saw more patients independently than during previous training (p<0.001) and felt that they took more responsibility for patient management (p<0.001) than metro-site students. Students at rural sites were more likely to agree that training during the pandemic provided good learning opportunities (p<0.001) and that medical students form a necessary part of the pandemic response. Overall, students at both distributed sites felt that their training gave them more confidence for their future internship than previous training at central teaching hospitals (median=2 (agree)).

Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic provided challenges for the continuation of quality medical training. It also provided the opportunity for innovative changes. This study demonstrates the successful outcomes, even during the pandemic, of distributed-site training, where students are immersed in the healthcare team, take responsibility of patient management and report that they improve their skills. Students at rural sites tended to report a more positive perspective on their clinical training. Rather than seeing the end of the pandemic as a time to revert to the previous status quo, the students in this study suggest to us that the lessons learnt from this forced innovation in distributed learning can now inform a better approach to clinical education for the future.

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来源期刊
Rural and remote health
Rural and remote health Rural Health-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
145
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Rural and Remote Health is a not-for-profit, online-only, peer-reviewed academic publication. It aims to further rural and remote health education, research and practice. The primary purpose of the Journal is to publish and so provide an international knowledge-base of peer-reviewed material from rural health practitioners (medical, nursing and allied health professionals and health workers), educators, researchers and policy makers.
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