Literature DB >> 25193732

Telemedicine as an ethics teaching tool for medical students within the nephrology curriculum.

Katrina A Bramstedt1, Melissa Prang1, Sameer Dave1, Paul Ng Hung Shin1, Amani Savy1, Richard A Fatica2.   

Abstract

A novel patient-centered approach was used to deliver ethics curriculum to medical students. Two medical school clinicians designed a telemedicine session linking their facilities (across 2 continents). The session, Exploring the Patient Experience Through Telemedicine: Dialysis and End-Stage Renal Disease, allowed second-year medical students to explore various parameters of quality of life experienced by dialysis patients. A panel of 4 medical students interviewed a dialysis patient via Skype video connection between the medical school and the hospital's dialysis unit. Interview questions were adapted from the Kidney Disease Quality of Life instrument. During the live video-streamed interview, the remaining 23 second-year medical students observed the session. Afterward, the 23 were offered a voluntary anonymous online feedback survey (15 responded). The 4 panelists submitted narrative responses to 2 open-ended questions about their experience. All 15 responding students "Strongly agreed" or "Agreed" that the session was an aid to their professionalism skills and behaviors; 14 of 15 "Strongly agreed" or "Agreed" that telemedicine technology contributed to their understanding of the topic; 12 of 15 "Strongly agreed" that the session improved their understanding of the psychosocial burdens of dialysis, quality of life, and human suffering, and increased their empathy toward patients; and 12 of 15 "Strongly agreed" or "Agreed" that the session encouraged reflective thinking and was an aid to improving their communication skills. Telemedicine can be an effective and feasible method to deliver an ethics curriculum with a patient-centered approach. Additionally, the cross-cultural experience exposes students to additional contextual features of medicine.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25193732     DOI: 10.7182/pit2014289

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Transplant        ISSN: 1526-9248            Impact factor:   1.187


  7 in total

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2.  Building virtual communities of practice for health.

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4.  Telehealth: A Balanced Look at Incorporating This Technology Into Practice.

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Review 5.  Telemedicine curriculum in undergraduate medical education: a systematic search and review.

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Journal:  Health Technol (Berl)       Date:  2021-05-10

6.  Patient Care via Video Consultations: Piloting and S.W.O.T. Analysis of a Family Medicine Digitally Synchronous Seminar for Medical Students.

Authors:  Franziska Särchen; Susanne Springborn; Achim Mortsiefer; Jan Ehlers
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-07-22       Impact factor: 4.614

7.  Crises drive innovation.

Authors:  C K Gunner; R Oliphant; A J M Watson
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  7 in total

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