Developing an Educational Strategy for Delivering an E-learning Disaster Medicine Course for Undergraduate Students in US Medical Schools

Introduction:Disaster Medicine (DM) is a discipline arising from the marriage of emergency medicine and disaster management. The importance of DM has recently increased, with current wildfire situations throughout the world being examples of mass scale disasters with significant human morbidity and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Prehospital and disaster medicine 2019-05, Vol.34 (s1), p.s116-s117
Hauptverfasser: Molloy, Michael, Power, Edmond, Ciottone, Gregory R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction:Disaster Medicine (DM) is a discipline arising from the marriage of emergency medicine and disaster management. The importance of DM has recently increased, with current wildfire situations throughout the world being examples of mass scale disasters with significant human morbidity and mortality. DM deals with preparedness, mitigation, response, recovery, and prevention of disasters (1).Aim:To develop an educational strategy and reusable format for delivering undergraduate DM courses online. Man-made, weather-related, humanitarian, and technological disasters occur all around the globe annually, yet the majority of medical schools do not have an undergraduate DM program. This project developed an online course structure accessible to medical schools and students throughout the world.Methods:Learning theories and models of learning were used to construct a course layout that encouraged students to be active learners, developed long-term retention strategies, and facilitated assessment for and of learning. This was accomplished through innovative educational modalities, including novel apps and external online resources. The course focuses heavily on outcome-based education with an emphasis on the development of applicable skills. Each lecture is divided into a series of learning objectives to allow students to master concepts sequentially, followed by questions to make use of the “testing effect” (2).Results:Focused review of current medical education literature reveals that students learn best when given short, outcome-focused “mini-lectures” followed by low-stakes assessment and feedback.Discussion:Medical schools without trained DM staff now have access to expert online material developed by educationalists with a focus on skills and knowledge retention.
ISSN:1049-023X
1945-1938
DOI:10.1017/S1049023X19002486