Tag: healthcare education

  • Addressing the Healthcare Learning Transfer Gap Post Pandemic

    Addressing the Healthcare Learning Transfer Gap Post Pandemic

    It’s not uncommon to hear healthcare professionals complain about work performance of new graduates who were recently integrated into the clinics, hospitals and the healthcare system. We heard reports of medical errors and patient safety concerns because allegedly, the newly integrated grads still lacked skills and competencies but were “hurriedly” hired to work in a severely undermanned healthcare system. The three years of pandemic was blamed for the learning disruption. Learning transfer though isn’t only affected by the healthcare providers competency but also by the workplace environment.

    While these allegations needs to be properly validated and documented, it is important that we bring this “elephant in the room” up front and find solutions, as patient safety is a top priority for healthcare providers. The healthcare academe and our healthcare system seem to have forgotten this learning “gap” in the midst of addressing other post pandemic healthcare system problems. This will be the topic of the #HealthXPh chat this Saturday April 15, 2023 9PM Manila time. Here are the chat guide questions:

    T1. Have you encountered patient safety issues lately that might be attributable to the lack of healthcare professional competency or an unsafe workplace environment?

    T2. As a healthcare professional/ student, how did you react to such patient safety issue?

    T3. What recommendations can you give to our healthcare educational system and our work environment to address this patient safety issue?

    To join the #HealthXPh chat, just append your answers to the three guide questions above between 9-10PM Manila time this Saturday April 15, 2023. See you there!

    Image by Drazen Zigic on Freepik

  • Social media in healthcare education, inclusion or just distraction?

    Social media is pervasive, even in healthcare. As an early adopter, I witnessed how social media went mainstream as it integrates into our lives. I’ve also been a witness to the many challenges and opportunities social media presents as it slowly encroaches into the silos of our daily lives.

    My struggle though is not always about social media integration or the technical skills needed to do so. I have have always been preoccupied on how social media could or should enhance my learning- to reflective thinking rather than just information, knowledge more than opinion and in healthcare, clinical and patient skills rather than textbook regurgitations.

    In #HealthXPh, we’ve previously discussed why social media is of value to healthcare. We’ve tackled how social media is used as a tool to enhance education and build interactivity to our traditional learning styles. Social media has shown promise in areas  collaborative learning using user generated materials while creating meaningful engagements in the healthcare sector.

    There are stinging questions to the value social media in educating healthcare or would be healthcare professionals. Would incorporating social media in healthcare education really improve the knowledge, attitudes, values and skills, of future healthcare professionals?

    There were studies that tries to understand the challenges and opportunities of  incorporating healthcare social media in their medical curriculum. But the “infancy” of social media and the lack of rigorous controlled studies eludes a clear answer at this moment. The answer to these questions ( if ever it could be answered) may be found in the next generation of healthcare professionals.

    In spite these issues, healthcare institutions abroad began incorporating healthcare social media in their learning curriculum. In the Philippines, social media healthcare is not in any medical or healthcare curriculum. Why? Why are current healthcare students taking social media seriously?

    When asked, most nursing and medical students would answer, “I have no time for such”.  If it’s not included in the curriculum we’re not going to spend time learning it. Surely if our medical educators didn’t include it in our curriculum, they probably didn’t find any value for it in our education” .

    I’m not an expert in healthcare education, but I do understand the problems besetting an institution in training future healthcare professionals. Identifying what’s important to the KAVS learning of healthcare students is difficult enough, incorporating a complex, learning resource such as social media doesn’t make it easier, at least to most healthcare educators that I know. It would take a generation of physicians to find that out.

    I have a balance of views regarding inclusion of social media in the healthcare curriculum. But, if we don’t bring the discussion now, we may never find out in the next generation of healthcare professionals.

    Join us this Saturday August 8, 2015 9PM as we discuss the value of healthcare social media in medical education. Is it a distinction or just a distraction?

    • T1: Should healthcare social media be included in medical/healthcare curriculum? Why or why not?
    • T2: What are the challenges and opportunities in incorporating social media in our healthcare curriculum?
    • T3. How do you measure the impact of incorporating social media into the healthcare professional’s education?

    As a closing thought (CT) please give an area in the education of future healthcare professionals, where social media has the most / least impact.

    Resources:

    McGowan BS, Wasko M, Vartabedian BS, Miller RS, Freiherr DD, Abdolrasulnia M
    Understanding the Factors That Influence the Adoption and Meaningful Use of Social Media by Physicians to Share Medical Information
    J Med Internet Res 2012;14(5):e117
    URL: http://www.jmir.org/2012/5/e117
    DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2138
    PMID: 23006336
    PMCID: PMC3510763
    http://www.eventscribe.com/2015/ACEHPAnnual/assets/pdf/142420.pdf

    Kind T, Genrich G, Sodhi A, Chretien KC. Social media policies at US medical schools. Medical Education Online. 2010;15:10.3402/meo.v15i0.5324. doi:10.3402/meo.v15i0.5324.