为曼达林学生提供新冠肺炎疫苗虚拟教育的框架:教育干预模块

Jici Wang, Benjamin M. Moy, Ross T. Kaufhold, Aurelio Muzaurieta, Yang Xia, Shan Jiang, Angela Yim, Jane Chang Miller, Shiwei Zhou, Pearl Lee, Lisa Hou, Janilla Lee, Michael Heung
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摘要

背景:在美国,英语水平有限的患者在理解与健康相关的信息并采取行动方面面临重大障碍,特别是在COVID-19大流行期间。事实证明,卫生专业人员向讲普通话的患者传达covid -19相关信息的能力在讨论疫苗功效、副作用和疫苗后保护方面至关重要。方法:作者创建了一个一小时的教育模块,帮助讲普通话的医学生更好地向讲普通话的人传达COVID-19疫苗信息。该模块由教育指南组成,介绍了关键术语和解决常见问题,以及前后调查。作者招募了59名说普通话的医科学生,他们之前都完成了医学普通话选修课。该模块和调查于2021年8月分发并完成。数据分析测量了主观五点李克特量表问题的总平均值变化和客观知识基础问题的百分比准确性变化。结果:86.4%的参与者主要以英语为母语,普通话水平不一。教育模块显著提高了参与者用中英文讨论新冠肺炎疫苗的主观舒适度。参与者在解释COVID-19疫苗之间差异的能力方面,英语和普通话的进步最大,英语和普通话的总平均进步为0.39,普通话的总平均进步为1.48。调查对象在以知识为基础的普通话客观问题上的准确率也有所提高。结论:该模块为学习普通话的医学生提供了向一般人群传递可靠信息的技能,并为多语言医学专业人员的教育模块的持续发展提供了典范。
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Framework for virtual education of COVID-19 vaccines for Mandarin-speaking learners: an educational intervention module
Background: In the United States, patients with limited English proficiency face significant barriers to comprehending and acting upon health-related information, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. The ability of health professionals to communicate COVID-19-related information to Mandarin-speaking patients has proved critical in discussions about vaccine efficacy, side effects, and post-vaccine protection. Methods: The authors created a one-hour educational module to help Mandarin-speaking medical students better convey COVID-19 vaccine information to Mandarin-only speakers. The module is composed of an educational guide, which introduced key terminology and addressed commonly asked questions, and pre- and post-surveys. The authors recruited 59 Mandarin-speaking medical students all of whom had previously completed a medical Mandarin elective. The module and surveys were distributed and completed in August 2021. Data analysis measured the change in aggregate mean for subjective five-point Likert-scale questions and change in percent accuracy for objective knowledge-based questions. Results: 86.4% of participants were primary English speakers with variable levels of Mandarin proficiency. The educational module significantly improved participants' subjective comfort level in discussing the COVID-19 vaccine in English and Mandarin. The largest improvement in both English and Mandarin was demonstrated in participants' ability to explain differences between the COVID-19 vaccines, with an aggregate mean improvement of 0.39 for English and 1.48 for Mandarin. Survey respondents also demonstrated increased percent accuracy in knowledge-based objective questions in Mandarin. Conclusions: This module provides Mandarin-learning medical students with skills to deliver reliable information to the general population and acts as a model for the continued development of educational modules for multilingual medical professionals.
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