课程创新:基于社会媒体的教育课程提高了神经危重症护理学员的知识

Ronald Alvarado-Dyer, F. S. Saleh Velez, Hera A. Kamdar, Naomi Niznick, Elizabeth Carroll, Carlos Castillo-Pinto, Melvin Parasram, D. Kelly, Shweta Goswami, Mikel S. Ehntholt, N. Dangayach, M. Babi, A. Ramadan, C. Lazaridis, Catherine Albin, Nicholas A. Morris
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引用次数: 1

摘要

神经危重症护理(NCC)协会住院医师和同事任务小组的NEURON研究得出结论,学习者对NCC教育改进的需要有显著的关注。为了解决这些缺点,我们确定了NCC缺乏针对受训人员的教育课程,并为受训人员开发了基于twitter的教育课程,以提高NCC的知识。本研究的目的是描述NCC的病理生理学,描述系统的诊断方法,并在疾病管理中应用循证策略。10名学员开发了一套基于tweetori(在Twitter上提供的教育内容)的课程,由至少2名NCC教师进行个人审查。学习者通过Twitter招募,并随机分为两组中的一组,进行候补名单对照前瞻性研究。第一组学生在2021-2022学年的前6个月完成课程,第二组学生在下半年完成课程。每周在一个私人Twitter账户上发布推文,该账户只对积极学习者群体开放。在三个时间点对学习者进行多项选择式测试(由学员编写并由教师审核):在第一个twitter帖子发布之前(学前课程评估),在第一组完成所有教程之后,在第二组开始课程之前(评估1),以及在两组完成之后(评估2)。主要结果是第二次和第三次评估的平均分数。146名学习者采用分层分组随机法被分配到第一组或第二组,其中包括99名(68%)神经内科居民,81名(55%)美国学生。每组由73名参与者组成。在私人推特账户(@NeurocriticalE)上共发表了20篇推文。分别对100名、32名和18名学生进行学前教育课程评估、评估1和评估2。第一组和第二组在学前教育课程评估中的表现相似。在评估1和2时,与学习者2组相比,观察到第一组的知识改进潜力。第一组有更多的印象、参与、点赞、URL点击和媒体浏览量。虽然有一些学习者流失,但我们的研究表明,社交媒体可以有效地传递教育内容,并吸引全球不同群体的学员。
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Curriculum Innovations: A Social Media–Based Educational Curriculum Improves Knowledge for Trainees in Neurocritical Care
The Neurocritical Care (NCC) Society Resident and Fellow Task Force's NEURON study concluded that learners had significant concerns regarding the need for educational improvement in NCC. To address these shortcomings, we identified the lack of an educational curriculum for trainees in NCC and developed a Twitter-based educational curriculum for trainees to improve knowledge in NCC.The objectives of this study were to describe the pathophysiology, delineate a systematic diagnostic approach, and apply evidence-based strategies in the management of diseases in NCC.Ten trainees developed a Tweetorial (educational content available on Twitter)–based curriculum, with individual review by at least 2 NCC faculty. Learners were recruited through Twitter and randomized to 1 of 2 groups in a wait-list control prospective study. Group 1 completed the curriculum in the first 6 months of the 2021–2022 academic year, and group 2 completed the curriculum in the second half. Tweetorials were posted weekly on a private Twitter account only available to the active learner group. Learners were assessed by a multiple-choice format test (written by the trainees and reviewed by faculty) at 3 time points: before the first Tweetorial was released (preeducational curriculum assessment), after group 1 completed all tutorials and before group 2 started the curriculum (assessment 1), and after both groups finished (assessment 2). The primary outcome was the mean score on the second and third assessments.One hundred forty-six learners were assigned to group 1 or 2 using stratified block randomization including 99 (68%) Neurology residents, 81 (55%) US-based. Each group was composed of 73 participants. A total of 20 Tweetorials were published on a private Twitter account (@NeurocriticalE). Completed assessments were obtained from 100, 32, and 18 learners for the pre-educational curriculum assessment, assessment 1, and assessment 2, respectively. Group 1 and group 2 performed similarly in the pre-educational curriculum assessment. A potential for knowledge improvement was observed in group 1 at assessments 1 and 2 when compared with the learner group 2. Group 1 had more impressions, engagements, likes, URL clicks, and media views.Although there was some learner attrition, our study demonstrates that social media can effectively deliver educational content and engage a diverse group of trainees around the globe.
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