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Curr Pharm Teach Learn ; 9(4): 585-594, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29233431

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Interdisciplinary practice is a primary focus within the United States health care system. Despite the existence of interdisciplinary educational efforts in pharmacy for many years, the practice only recently entered mainstream health care education. Informatics offers interdisciplinary educational opportunities. Mobile health (mHealth), an informatics sub-discipline, is the use of mobile devices for health and wellness activities. We used the mHealth domain as the context for an interdisciplinary learning experience for pharmacy and computer science and software engineering (CSSE) students. EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITY: Educational activities focused on creating an mHealth course sequence and an mHealth application (app). Students worked in teams to complete various assignments, including developing and presenting a course proposal, building a purchase plan for mHealth equipment, developing an mHealth app prototype, delivering a disease state presentation (pharmacy students only), developing use case scenarios (CSSE students only), and completing peer evaluations. CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITY: Course evaluations were only available from pharmacy students. They indicated an overall favorable rating (mean 3.27-3.55; 4=strongly agree). Survey data collected after students entered the workforce indicated that students felt better prepared than their colleagues to work with individuals from other disciplines (mean 4.82; 5=strongly agree). Students also indicated using the knowledge from course proposal development in their careers (mean 4.27; 5=strongly agree). Through team interactions, students learned from each other while overcoming challenges related to terminology and content areas. Skills learned through team interactions reflect real-world processes and are expected to support students' future professional responsibilities.


Subject(s)
Problem-Based Learning/standards , Program Development/methods , Telemedicine/standards , Education, Pharmacy/methods , Education, Pharmacy/trends , Educational Measurement/methods , Humans , Interdisciplinary Communication , Problem-Based Learning/methods , Software Design , Telemedicine/methods , Telemedicine/trends , United States
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