Smartphone and medical applications use by contemporary surgical trainees: A national questionnaire study

T. Carter, Alexandre Jais, M. Rodrigues, A. Robertson, R. Brady
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Results: Thirty three percent (76/233) of trainees responded. Ninety two percent owned a smartphone. Trainees used smartphones at work for email (96%), calls (85%), SMS/MMS (81%), Internet browsing (76%) and medical app access (55%). Eighty two percent of respondents had downloaded at least one app, including clinical guidelines (70%), medical calculators (59%), anatomy guides (50%) and study aids (32%). There was no statistical difference between demographics and smartphone use or app downloads. Thirty five percent had used apps to help make clinical decisions. Thirteen percent felt they had encountered erroneous outputs, according to their own judgement and/or calculation. Fifty eight percent felt apps should be compulsorily regulated however only one trainee could name a regulatory body. Conclusion: Smartphone possession amongst NHS surgical trainees is high. Knowledge of app regulation is poor, with potential safety concerns regarding inaccurate outputs. Integration of apps, developed and approved by an appropriate authority, may improve confidence when integrating them into training and healthcare delivery.
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当代外科受训者使用智能手机和医疗应用程序:一项全国问卷调查研究
结果:33%(76/233)的学员做出了回应。92%的人拥有智能手机。学员在工作中使用智能手机收发电子邮件(96%)、打电话(85%)、发短信/彩信(81%)、上网(76%)和访问医疗应用程序(55%)。82%的受访者至少下载了一个应用程序,包括临床指南(70%)、医疗计算器(59%)、解剖指南(50%)和学习辅助(32%)。人口统计数据与智能手机使用或应用下载量之间没有统计学差异。35%的人使用应用程序来帮助做出临床决定。13%的人认为,根据他们自己的判断和/或计算,他们遇到了错误的输出。58%的受访者认为应用程序应该受到强制监管,但只有一名受训者能说出监管机构的名字。结论:NHS外科培训生智能手机拥有率较高。对应用程序监管的了解很少,对不准确的输出存在潜在的安全担忧。整合由适当机构开发和批准的应用程序,可以提高将其整合到培训和医疗保健服务中的信心。
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