虚拟实验室对学生临床教育准备的影响:混合方法分析

Journal, physical therapy education Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Epub Date: 2023-01-30 DOI:10.1097/JTE.0000000000000270
Caitlin Kothe, Breanna Reynolds, Kareaion Eaton, Sarah Harrison, Alex Kozsalinski, Monica Krogmann, Hannah Norton, Ann Pharr, Ahmad Sabbahi, Kerry Volansky
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引用次数: 0

摘要

文本中提供了补充数字内容。简介:在新冠肺炎大流行期间,物理治疗师(PT)教育项目在2020年增加了虚拟选项,为学生实践临床技能做好准备。本研究的目的是调查学生在选择虚拟或面对面实验室沉浸感的基础上的信心、准备和临床表现。二次分析将2020年的队列结果与2019年的前一个队列(大灾难前)进行了比较。文献综述:对虚拟技能习得的研究支持了教学和心理运动技能习得的有效性。对临床教育表现的影响尚不清楚。受试者:2020年(n=91)和2019年(n=86)加速混合PT教育项目的学生记录。方法:在这项混合方法的观察性研究中,研究人员分析了Qualtrics调查和PT临床表现工具(CPI),以比较学生的结果。统计分析包括卡方、双向多变量方差分析(MANOVA)和Mann-Whitney U检验。MAXQDA软件用于编码来自CPI的学生和临床讲师的叙述性反应,这些反应与进一步发展的优势和领域有关。结果:2020年所有学生在虚拟实验室学习了整整9天,24%的学生在剩下的8.5天里选择了虚拟实验室;97%的学生表示对自己的临床体验充满信心(66%的住院患者)。基于教学方法(虚拟或面对面)或临床实践环境(住院或门诊),在信心、准备或CPI表现方面没有发现统计学上的显著差异。定性分析中出现了希望有更多时间准备和对临床决策更有信心的主题。讨论和结论:结果表明,虚拟实验室与面对面实验室没有统计学上的显著差异,与2019年的队列相比也没有差异。虚拟教学有效地为学生在所有环境中的临床体验做好了准备。尽管可能更喜欢亲自体验实验室,但在不影响学生表现的情况下,在虚拟环境中提供有效体验是可能的。需要进一步的研究来证实这一发现。
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The Impact of Virtual Laboratories on Student Clinical Education Preparedness: A Mixed-Method Analysis.

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic saw physical therapist (PT) education programs in 2020 add virtual options to prepare students for hands-on clinical skills. The purpose of this research was to investigate student confidence, preparation, and clinical performance based on their choice of virtual or in-person laboratory immersion. Secondary analysis compared 2020 cohort outcomes with the previous cohort in 2019 (prepandemic).

Review of literature: Virtual skill acquisition has been studied with support for effectiveness in didactic and psychomotor skill acquisition. The impact on clinical education performance is unknown.

Subjects: Student records from an accelerated hybrid, PT education program in 2020 (n = 91) and 2019 (n = 86).

Methods: In this mixed-method observational study, researchers analyzed a Qualtrics survey and the PT Clinical Performance Instrument (CPI) to compare student outcomes. Statistical analyses included chi-square, two-way multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA), and Mann-Whitney U test. MAXQDA software was used to code student and clinical instructor narrative responses from the CPI related to strengths and areas for further development.

Results: All students in 2020 attended laboratory virtually for 9 full days, and 24% of students chose virtual laboratory for the remaining 8.5 days; 97% of students reported feeling confident going into their clinical experience (66% inpatient). No statistically significant differences were found based on instructional method (virtual or in-person) or clinical practice setting (inpatient or outpatient) for confidence, preparation, or CPI performance. Themes of wanting more time to prepare and more confidence in clinical decision making emerged from the qualitative analysis.

Discussion and conclusion: Results indicate no statistically significant difference for virtual versus in-person laboratory and no difference compared with the 2019 cohort. Virtual instruction effectively prepared students for their clinical experiences across all settings. Although an in-person laboratory experience may be preferred, it is possible to deliver effective experiences in a virtual setting without compromising student performance. Further research is needed to confirm findings.

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