journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38394053/games-to-support-teaching-clinical-reasoning-in-health-professions-education-a-scoping-review
#21
REVIEW
Gilbert Koelewijn, Marije P Hennus, Helianthe S M Kort, Joost Frenkel, Thijs van Houwelingen
INTRODUCTION: Given the complexity of teaching clinical reasoning to (future) healthcare professionals, the utilization of serious games has become popular for supporting clinical reasoning education. This scoping review outlines games designed to support teaching clinical reasoning in health professions education, with a specific emphasis on their alignment with the 8-step clinical reasoning cycle and the reflective practice framework, fundamental for effective learning. METHODS: A scoping review using systematic searches across seven databases (PubMed, CINAHL, ERIC, PsycINFO, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase) was conducted...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361490/-how-to-article-guidelines-for-serving-on-an-expert-panel
#22
REVIEW
Maya S Iyer, David Way, Barbara Overholser, Nancy Spector
Academics in medicine are frequently asked to serve on panels to discuss their clinical, research, education, administrative or personal expertise. While panel discussions are often the highlight of a conference or event, in the medical literature, there is very little published on how an individual can effectively prepare and present as an expert panelist. This paper offers guidelines that will enable academics to prepare, deliver, and engage in active dialogue during a panel discussion. Specific tactics include how to accept invitations to serve on a panel, conducting pre-panel conference meetings and background research, preparing concise opening statements and new insights, connecting with the audience, answering questions in a collaborative spirit, and debriefing after the panel...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38359164/lgbtq-health-education-for-medical-students-in-the-united-states-a-narrative-literature-review
#23
REVIEW
Tess I Jewell, Elizabeth M Petty
INTRODUCTION: People who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, intersex, and other sexual/gender minorities (LGBTQ+) may experience discrimination when seeking healthcare. Medical students should be trained in inclusive and affirming care for LGBTQ+ patients. This narrative literature review explores the landscape of interventions and evaluations related to LGBTQ+ health content taught in medical schools in the USA and suggests strategies for further curriculum development...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38359156/clicks-for-credit-an-analysis-of-healthcare-professionals-social-media-use-and-potential-for-continuing-professional-development-activities
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Logan Van Ravenswaay, Alex Parnes, Sarah A Nisly
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have examined social media habits and utilization patterns among various groups of healthcare professionals. However, very few studies have evaluated the use of social media to support continuing professional development activities. The goal of the 2023 Clinical Education Alliance social media survey was to explore how HCPs interact professionally with social media, describe utilization trends, and identify barriers to using social media to disseminate CPD content...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38354128/addressing-unprofessional-behaviors-in-the-clinical-learning-environment-lessons-from-a-multi-year-virtual-intergenerational-interdisciplinary-workshop
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stacey Rose, Anita Kusnoor, Phuong Huynh, Jocelyn Greely, Yesenia Rojas-Khalil, Doris Kung, Anne Gill, Nadia Ismail, Nital Appelbaum
INTRODUCTION: Optimizing the clinical learning environment (CLE) is a medical education priority nationwide. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We developed a virtual, one-hour workshop engaging students, housestaff and faculty in small-group discussions of five case scenarios adapted from reported unprofessional behaviors in the CLE, plus didactics regarding mistreatment, microaggressions and bystander interventions. RESULTS: Over two sessions (2021-2022), we engaged 340 students and 73 faculty/housestaff facilitators...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38351737/preparing-healthcare-leaders-of-the-digital-age-with-an-integrative-artificial-intelligence-curriculum-a-pilot-study
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Soo Hwan Park, Roshini Pinto-Powell, Thomas Thesen, Alexander Lindqwister, Joshua Levy, Rachael Chacko, Devina Gonzalez, Connor Bridges, Adam Schwendt, Travis Byrum, Justin Fong, Shahin Shasavari, Saeed Hassanpour
Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly being introduced into the clinical workflow of many specialties. Despite the need to train physicians who understand the utility and implications of AI and mitigate a growing skills gap, no established consensus exists on how to best introduce AI concepts to medical students during preclinical training. This study examined the effectiveness of a pilot Digital Health Scholars (DHS) non-credit enrichment elective that paralleled the Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine's first-year preclinical curriculum with a focus on introducing AI algorithms and their applications in the concurrently occurring systems-blocks...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38324669/non-native-english-speaking-applicants-and-the-likelihood-of-physician-assistant-program-matriculation
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shahpar Najmabadi, Virginia Valentin, Joanne Rolls, Mary Showstark, Leigh Elrod, Carey Barry, Adam Broughton, Michael Bessette, Trenton Honda
PURPOSE: Effective communication is critical in patient care. Multilingual medical providers, including Physician Assistants (PAs) can contribute to improved health care among patients with limited English proficiency; however, this is contingent upon matriculating multilingual providers. In this study, the association between prospective applicants' self-reported English as second language (ESL) status and their likelihood of matriculation into a PA program was investigated. METHODS: Participants included applicants to five admission cycles of the Centralized Application Service for Physician Assistant from 2012 to 2020...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38320116/minding-the-gap-towards-a-shared-clinical-reasoning-lexicon-across-the-pre-clerkship-clerkship-transition
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robin K Ovitsh, Shanu Gupta, Anita Kusnoor, Jennifer M Jackson, Danielle Roussel, Christopher J Mooney, Roshini Pinto-Powell, Joel L Appel, Rahul Mhaskar, Jonathan Gold
Teaching and learning of clinical reasoning are core principles of medical education. However, little guidance exists for faculty leaders to navigate curricular transitions between pre-clerkship and clerkship curricular phases. This study compares how educational leaders in these two phases understand clinical reasoning instruction. Previously reported cross-sectional surveys of pre-clerkship clinical skills course directors, and clerkship leaders were compared. Comparisons focused on perceived importance of a number of core clinical reasoning concepts, barriers to clinical reasoning instruction, level of familiarity across the undergraduate medical curriculum, and inclusion of clinical reasoning instruction in each area of the curriculum...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38320114/the-contextual-interview-a-cross-cutting-patient-interviewing-approach-for-social-context
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amber Cahill, Matthew Martin, Bridget Beachy, David Bauman, Jordan Howard-Young
Patient interviewing pedagogy in medical education has not evolved to comprehensively capture the biopsychosocial model of healthcare delivery. While gathering a patient's social history targets important aspects of social context it does not adequately capture and account for the real-time reassessment required to understand evolving factors that influence exposure to drivers of health inequities, social determinants of health, and access to supports that promote health. The authors offer a patient interviewing approach called the Contextual Interview (CI) that specifically targets dynamic and ever-changing social context information...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38320110/evaluating-the-effectiveness-of-an-online-curriculum-on-caring-for-transgender-and-nonbinary-patients
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie Blaszczak, Sara Wiener, Melissa Plegue, Dan Shumer, John Shatzer, Anita Hernandez
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:  It is well established that provider lack of knowledge in the field of transgender and nonbinary health is as ignificant barrier to care and that training in this area is lacking. This study examined how family medicine residents' self-confidence and medical knowledge in providing gender-affirming care changed after completing a novel, online curriculum on transgender and nonbinary care. METHODS: Thirty-nine family medicine residents were invited to complete the curriculum...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38300902/rethinking-and-reinforcing-cultural-humility-against-the-culture-wars-a-framework-for-addressing-receptivity-to-diversity-initiatives
#31
EDITORIAL
Jerel M Ezell
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38290059/does-gender-disparity-exist-in-neurosurgery-training-evidence-from-a-nationwide-survey-from-pakistan
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Muhammad Shakir, Hammad Atif Irshad, Ahmed Altaf, Shamila Ladak, Hafiza Fatima Aziz, Syed Ather Enam
Gender disparities are prevalent in the neurosurgical field, particularly for female trainees, despite the growing demand for neurosurgeons. The situation is bleaker in low-and middle-income countries, where gender disparities among neurosurgical trainees have not been evaluated. We aimed to gauge the gender differences in opportunities and perceptions of neurosurgery training in Pakistan by comparing responses between males and females. A nationwide web-based survey was conducted in Pakistan, covering 22 College of Physicians and Surgeons of Pakistan (CPSP) accredited neurosurgery training programs...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38290044/tailoring-a-specific-medical-leadership-development-program-for-faculty-members-the-lyon-ottawa-experience
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Claire Falandry, Justine Bacchetta, Muriel Doret-Dion, Carole Ferraro-Peyret, Cyrille B Confavreux, Marion Douplat, Patrick Feugier, Arnaud Friggeri, Pierre-Adrien Bolze, Yesim Dargaud, Alexandre Messager, Martine Wallon, Loïc Geffroy, Yves Matillon, Jacques Bradwejn
The development of leadership skills has been the topic of several position statements over recent decades, and the need of medical leaders for a specific training was emphasized during the COVID-19 crisis, to enable them to adequately collaborate with governments, populations, civic society, organizations, and universities. However, differences persist as to the way such skills are taught, at which step of training, and to whom. From these observations and building on previous experience at the University of Ottawa, a team of medical professors from Lyon (France), Ottawa, and Montreal (Canada) universities decided to develop a specific medical leadership training program dedicated to faculty members taking on leadership responsibilities...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38281205/covid-19-pandemic-and-its-impact-on-medical-interns-mental-health-of-public-and-private-hospitals-in-guadalajara
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Francisco José Barbosa-Camacho, Víctor Ulises Rodríguez-Machuca, Juan Carlos Ibarrola-Peña, Jonathan Matías Chejfec-Ciociano, Mario Jesús Guzmán-Ruvalcaba, Jaime Alberto Tavares-Ortega, Gonzalo Delgado-Hernandez, Gabino Cervantes-Guevara, Enrique Cervantes-Pérez, Sol Ramírez-Ochoa, Clotilde Fuentes-Orozco, Alejandro Gonzalez-Ojeda
INTRODUCTION: Burnout syndrome is a global burden characterized by exhaustion, work detachment, and a sense of ineffectiveness. It affects millions of individuals worldwide, with a particularly high prevalence among medical students. Factors such as demanding education, exposure to suffering, and the COVID-19 pandemic have contributed to elevated stress levels. Addressing this issue is crucial due to its impact on well-being and health-care quality. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This cross-sectional survey study assessed fear of COVID-19 and burnout levels among medical student interns in hospitals in Guadalajara, Jalisco...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38266115/medical-education-research-study-quality-instrument-an-objective-instrument-susceptible-to-subjectivity
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Scott Jaros, Gary Beck Dallaghan
BACKGROUND: The medical education research study quality instrument (MERSQI) was designed to appraise medical education research quality based on study design criteria. As with many such tools, application of the results may have unintended consequences. This study applied the MERSQI to published medical education research identified in a bibliometric analysis. METHODS: A bibliometric analysis identified highly cited articles in medical education that two authors independently evaluated using the MERSQI...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38262001/characterizing-the-initial-effects-of-the-single-accreditation-system-merge-on-the-ophthalmology-residency-match
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Forrest Bohler, Allison Garden, Christian J Santiago, Lily Bohler, Varna Taranikanti
INTRODUCTION: In 2020, the American Osteopathic Association merged its residency programs into one system under the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). The effects of this transition on the ophthalmology match is not fully understood. The purpose of this study is to assess the early impact of the transition to ACGME accreditation on MD, DO, and IMG representation in ophthalmology residency programs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Information about resident medical degree and resident medical school was gathered from ophthalmology residency program websites from a resident class before and after the Transition...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38217884/challenge-integration-and-change-chatgpt-and-future-anatomical-education
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lige Leng
With the vigorous development of ChatGPT and its application in the field of education, a new era of the collaborative development of human and artificial intelligence and the symbiosis of education has come. Integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into medical education has the potential to revolutionize it. Large language models, such as ChatGPT, can be used as virtual teaching aids to provide students with individualized and immediate medical knowledge, and conduct interactive simulation learning and detection...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38194435/socio-culturally-responsive-medical-professionalism-and-ethics-education-a-curriculum-co-creation-approach
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nurfarahin Nasri, Wenwen Xu, Khairul Azhar Jamaludin, Nurfaradilla Mohamad Nasri
Medical professionalism and ethics (MPE) are critical components influencing how medical practitioners provide patients with the highest standard of care. As a result, a structured attempt has been undertaken to enhance the content and teaching delivery of the medical professionalism and ethics education (MPEE) in the undergraduate medical curriculum. Guided by Vygotsky's sociocultural learning theory, Harre and Van Langenhove's positioning theory and Taba's principles of curriculum development, a curriculum co-creation project was organized with the aim of developing a socio-culturally responsive MPEE...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38194431/financial-barriers-and-inequity-in-medical-education-in-india-challenges-to-training-a-diverse-and-representative-healthcare-workforce
#39
REVIEW
Faique Rahman, Vivek Bhat, Ahmad Ozair, Donald K E Detchou, Manmeet S Ahluwalia
India has been historically challenged by an insufficient and heterogeneously clustered distribution of healthcare infrastructure. While resource-limited healthcare settings, such as major parts of India, require multidisciplinary approaches for improvement, one key approach is the recruitment and training of a healthcare workforce representative of its population. This requires overcoming barriers to equity and representation in Indian medical education that are multi-faceted, historical, and rooted in inequality...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38194415/gamification-in-medical-education-identifying-and-prioritizing-key-elements-through-delphi-method
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yung-Fu Wang, Ya-Fang Hsu, Kwo-Ting Fang, Liang-Tseng Kuo
BACKGROUND: Gamification has gained popularity in medical education, but key elements have not been formally identified. This study aimed to generate and prioritize a list of key elements of gamification in medical education. METHODS: This study utilized a two-stage approach, including the Delphi method and qualitative interview. Nineteen medical educators with expertise in gamification participated in the Delphi method stage. Experts who had more than three years of experience with gamification in medical education constituted the expert panel...
December 31, 2024: Medical Education Online
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