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1.
10th E-Health and Bioengineering Conference, EHB 2022 ; 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2228901

ABSTRACT

As a result of the lack of access to hospitals for medical students during the COVID-19 pandemics, a web-based platform is being developed in partnership between the Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy in Bucharest and the University Politehnica of Bucharest. The platform allows medical students to simulate their interactions with patients that would typically occur on a daily basis in hospitals and to receive feedback around their performances from their professors on real time or afterwards. The platform has been evaluated during different stages of implementation by different groups of students. During these evaluations, the students needed some help/support that was provided through email or Skype. Therefore, a support module that would facilitate the help/support process during the future evaluations was developed and integrated in the platform. © 2022 IEEE.

2.
10th E-Health and Bioengineering Conference, EHB 2022 ; 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2223105

ABSTRACT

As a result of the lack of access to hospitals for medical students during the COVID-19 pandemics, a web-based platform is being developed in partnership between the Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy in Bucharest and the University Politehnica of Bucharest. The platform allows medical students to simulate their interactions with patients that would typically occur on a daily basis in hospitals and to receive feedback around their performances from their professors on real time or afterwards. The platform has been evaluated during different stages of implementation by different groups of students. During these evaluations, the students needed some help/support that was provided through email or Skype. Therefore, a support module that would facilitate the help/support process during the future evaluations was developed and integrated in the platform. © 2022 IEEE.

3.
Front Vet Sci ; 9: 911026, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2148130

ABSTRACT

To provide students of veterinary medicine with the necessary day 1 competences, e-learning offerings are increasingly used in addition to classical teaching formats such as lectures. For example, virtual patients offer the possibility of case-based, computer-assisted learning. A concept to teach and test clinical decision-making is the key feature (KF) approach. KF questions consist of three to five critical points that are crucial for the case resolution. In the current study usage, learning success, usability and acceptance of KF cases as neurological virtual patients should be determined in comparison to the long cases format. Elective courses were offered in winter term 2019/20 and summer term 2020 and a total of 38 virtual patients with neurological diseases were presented in the KF format. Eight cases were provided with a new clinical decision-making application (Clinical Reasoning Tool) and contrasted with eight other cases without the tool. In addition to the evaluation of the learning analytics (e.g., processing times, success rates), an evaluation took place after course completion. After 229 course participations (168 individual students and additional 61 with repeated participation), 199 evaluation sheets were completed. The average processing time of a long case was 53 min, while that of a KF case 17 min. 78% of the long cases and 73% of KF cases were successfully completed. The average processing time of cases with Clinical Reasoning Tool was 19 min. The success rate was 58.3 vs. 60.3% for cases without the tool. In the survey, the long cases received a ranking (1 = very good, 6 = poor) of 2.4, while KF cases received a grade of 1.6, 134 of the respondents confirmed that the casework made them feel better prepared to secure a diagnosis in a real patient. Flexibility in learning (n = 93) and practical relevance (n = 65) were the most frequently listed positive aspects. Since KF cases are short and highlight only the most important features of a patient, 30% (n = 70) of respondents expressed the desire for more specialist information. KF cases are suitable for presenting a wide range of diseases and for training students' clinical decision-making skills. The Clinical Reasoning Tool can be used for better structuring and visualizing the reasoning process.

4.
GMS J Med Educ ; 39(4): Doc47, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2054910

ABSTRACT

Background: Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the medical faculties in the Federal Republic of Germany converted their curricula to digital formats on a large scale and very quickly in spring 2020 as an emergency measure. At the same time, a start was made on the nationwide exchange of digital teaching/learning materials via the online platform "LOOOP share" in order to save local resources. Among other things, virtual patient cases (VP) were shared across faculties for case-based learning, through which students can acquire clinical decision-making skills. Objectives: Within the framework of the cooperation project "National Learning Platforms for Digital Patient-Related Learning in Medical Studies" (DigiPaL), the usability of VPs for students and teachers should be improved, and the spectrum of disease patterns that are covered by VPs should be systematically expanded. Results: With the participation of many locations, a total of 150 VPs were developed by 96 case authors from 16 faculties, in addition to the existing 403 VPs. The thematic selection was made on the basis of criteria oriented to the National Competence Based Catalogue of Learning Objectives for Undergraduate Medical Education (NKLM). After completion, these VPs were also made available to all faculties for free use via "LOOOP share" and the CASUS learning platform. Discussion: Even after the pandemic, these developed VPs should be available to the faculties and thus make a lasting contribution to improve medical training in Germany - especially in light of digital teaching formats being expressly advocated on the basis of the adapted current Medical Licensure Act (ÄApprO). A possible application is interdisciplinary learning of clinical decision-making with the help of blended learning formats within the framework of a longitudinal curriculum. The large number of involved colleagues and faculties shows that the nationally coordinated development of VPs across faculties was commonly seen as useful.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Humans , Curriculum , Faculty, Medical , Learning , Licensure, Medical , Clinical Competence , Germany
5.
BMC Med Educ ; 22(1): 429, 2022 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1881239

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Communication is an essential competence for medical students. Virtual patients (VP), computerized educational tools where users take the role of doctor, are increasingly used. Despite the wide range of VP utilization, evidence-based practical guidance on supporting development of communication skills for medical students remains unclear. We focused this scoping review on VP affordance for student learning especially important in the current environment of constrained patient access. METHODS: This scoping review followed Arksey & O'Malley's methodology. We tested and used a search strategy involving six databases, resulting in 5,262 citations. Two reviewers independently screened titles, full texts (n= 158) and finally performed data extraction on fifty-five included articles. To support consideration of educational affordance the authors employed a pragmatic framework (derived from activity theory) to map included studies on VP structure, curricular alignment, mediation of VP activity, and socio-cultural context. RESULTS: Findings suggest that not only the VP itself, but also its contextualization and associated curricular activities influence outcomes. The VP was trialled in the highest proportion of papers as a one-off intervention (19 studies), for an average duration of 44.9 minutes (range 10-120min), mainly in senior medical students (n=23), notably the largest group of studies did not have VP activities with explicit curricular integration (47%). There was relatively little repeated practice, low levels of feedback, self-reflection, and assessment. Students viewed VPs overall, citing authenticity and ease of use as important features. Resource implications are often omitted, and costings would facilitate a more complete understanding of implications of VP use. CONCLUSION: Students should be provided with maximal opportunity to draw out the VPs' full potential through repeated practice, without time-constraint and with curricular alignment. Feedback delivery enabling reflection and mastery is also key. The authors recommend educators to explicitly balance computerized authenticity with instructional design integrated within the curriculum.


Subject(s)
Curriculum , Students, Medical , Clinical Competence , Communication , Humans , Learning
6.
Int J Environ Res Public Health ; 19(10)2022 05 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1875634

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Virtual patients (VPs) are a suitable method for students to train their clinical reasoning abilities. We describe a process of developing a blueprint for a diverse and realistic VP collection (prior to VP creation) that facilitates deliberate practice of clinical reasoning and meets educational requirements of medical schools. METHODS: An international and interdisciplinary partnership of five European countries developed a blueprint for a collection of 200 VPs in four steps: (1) Defining the criteria (e.g., key symptoms, age, sex) and categorizing them into disease-, patient-, encounter- and learner-related, (2) Identifying data sources for assessing the representativeness of the collection, (3) Populating the blueprint, and (4) Refining and reaching consensus. RESULTS: The blueprint is publicly available and covers 29 key symptoms and 176 final diagnoses including the most prevalent medical conditions in Europe. Moreover, our analyses showed that the blueprint appears to be representative of the European population. CONCLUSIONS: The development of the blueprint required a stepwise approach, which can be replicated for the creation of other VP or case collections. We consider the blueprint an appropriate starting point for the actual creation of the VPs, but constant updating and refining is needed.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Clinical Reasoning , Europe , Humans
7.
GMS J Med Educ ; 37(7): Doc92, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-972860

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic posed new global challenges for teaching. We met these challenges as an international collaboration by adapting a collection of virtual patients for clinical reasoning training to this novel context.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Education, Medical/methods , Patient Simulation , Virtual Reality , Humans , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2
8.
GMS J Med Educ ; 37(7): Doc91, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-972237

ABSTRACT

Background: Diagnostic tests and examinations inform clinical decision making. Thus, an essential part of medical students' workplace-based training is dedicated to core skills in clinical diagnostic sciences. Due to a reduction of clinical internships for fifth-year students in the wake of COVID-19 learning activities replacing this aspect of training were needed. Project description: Virtual Patient online learning materials addressing clinical diagnostic sciences, specifically, radiology, were developed to prepare students for the transition to workplace-based learning. Three types of activities related to interprofessional patient treatment, showing how radiology knowledge improves the diagnosing and treatment of patients, were used to design the narrative of each virtual patient. The materials also showed students "how to learn" in the clinical workplace while showing "what to learn". Students complete relevant tasks and compare their approach with experts' approach in a self-directed way. Results: Twenty self-study quizzes, accompanied by nine interactive Webinars were developed, providing 13% of the overall available replacement learning materials for the summer term 2020. In June 2020, 486 students completed the program and collected a mean share of 16% (SD=10) of their required credits by choosing to learn with these materials. Conclusion: Developing virtual patients based on three types of clinical activities to prepare students for the transition to workplace based learning proved successful and allowed rapid development of learning materials. The presented online quiz format and webinar format showed high acceptance and interest among students.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Computer-Assisted Instruction/methods , Education, Distance/organization & administration , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/organization & administration , Radiology/education , Educational Measurement , Humans , Pandemics , Patient Simulation , SARS-CoV-2
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