| Literature DB >> 31706296 |
Eleni Dafli1, Ioannis Fountoukidis2, Chariklia Hatzisevastou-Loukidou3, Panagiotis D Bamidis3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Virtual Patients (VPs) may improve cognitive and behavioral skills better than traditional methods do. The aim of this paper was to investigate challenges faced by teachers and students in order to effectively implement VPs across undergraduate and postgraduate curricula. In addition, differences in student and teacher perceptions that could impact curricular integration of VPs were explored.Entities:
Keywords: Medical curriculum; Medical education; Virtual patients
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31706296 PMCID: PMC6842463 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-019-1849-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1In total, 252 evaluators, 33 medical teachers, in the first phase, and 219 medical students, in the second phase, participated in the evaluation. The second phase included 98 undergraduate medical students, 44 postgraduate medical students and 77 PhD students
The medical teachers’ questionnaire for the VPs creation, implementation and adoption
| Question type | Question | Answer |
|---|---|---|
| Dichotomous | Are educational activities based on virtual patients more interesting than traditional ones? | Yes/No |
| Dichotomous | Did the design process of a virtual patient increase your research interest for the clinical condition related to the case? | Yes/No |
| Open-ended | What are the advantages of the virtual patient design and implementation process and how do they enhance learning? | Free text |
| Open-ended | What are the weaknesses of the virtual patient design and implementation (or which parts can be improved to contribute more effectively to the educational process)? | Free text |
| Open-ended | Which part of the virtual patient design do you believe is more useful as an educational experience? | Free text |
| Open-ended | Do you think that the selection of multimedia material contributes, to the educational process? If yes, which way? | Free text |
| Set of Yes/No Questions | The design process of a virtual patient contributes to: | a. Clinical skills development through proper virtual patient management. b. Clinical skills development through training in decision making. c. Support of the educational experience, since it could be considered equal to training with real patients. d. Increase of gaining knowledge. e. Better memorization of key points. f. Deeper knowledge of the disease. |
| Likert-scale | What is the difficulty level of the virtual patient design? | 1–5 (in ascending order) |
| Open ended | What do you mostly remember from this activity? | Free text |
| Dichotomous | Do you consider that the virtual patient design process corresponds to your IT level of knowledge? | Yes/No |
| Dichotomous | Did the virtual patient design process increase the team spirit? | Yes/No |
| Dichotomous | Do you think it would be possible to implement this method in other fields? | Yes/No |
Medical teachers’ perceptions for VPs’ design, use and adoption in curriculum
| The design process of a virtual patient contributes to: | Table N % | |
|---|---|---|
| Deeper knowledge of the disease | Yes | 48,5% |
| No | 51,5% | |
| Better memorization of key points. | Yes | 51,5% |
| No | 48,5% | |
| Increase of gaining knowledge | Yes | 45,5% |
| No | 54,5% | |
| Support of the educational experience, since it could be considered equal to training with real patients. | Yes | 36,4% |
| No | 63,6% | |
| Clinical skills development through training in decision making. | Yes | 63,6% |
| No | 36,4% | |
| Clinical skills development through proper virtual patient management. | Yes | 60,6% |
| No | 39,4% | |
Medical teachers’ views on the VP design process and implementation
| Table N % | ||
|---|---|---|
| Do you consider that the virtual patient design process corresponds to your IT level of knowledge? | Yes | 79,3% |
| No | 20,7% | |
| Did the virtual patient design process increase the team spirit? | Yes | 53,8% |
| No | 46,2% | |
| Do you think it would be possible to implement this method in other fields? | Yes | 100,0% |
| No | 0,0% | |
Themes and Representative Quotations of Positive and Negative Medical Teachers’ Experiences with Virtual Patients
| Codes | Examples of positive codes | Examples of negative codes |
|---|---|---|
| Major Theme (1) Educational aspects of VP use (159) | ||
| Subtheme (1a) Clinical Care of patient (34) | ||
| 1.Clinical Efficiency (10) | “It makes the virtual visit go smoother…I take notes and prioritize knowledge… I don’t have to flip through a huge scenario” | “The doctor spends too much time” n = 2 |
| 2.Case review (24) | “I can go back and look at important test results” | “There are ECHO reports, but it seems like I don’t find where there are in the scenario” |
| Subtheme (1b) Learning effect of the VP (55) | ||
| 1.Facilitation of knowledge (11) | “The case and virtual trainer was asking me questions to verify and make sure everything is correct” | If they used some graphs or charts, I might say that was more effective” n = 1 |
| 2.Medical history (23) | “I had easy access to the vp history at my convenience” | “There are inaccuracies in at each scenario node I go to, they’re not always updating it” |
| 3.Assessment of knowledge (21) | “I think that learning with the virtual patients is important in order to do well in the final exam for this course” | “It does not make you feel secure enough” |
| Subtheme (1c) Information Access (40) | ||
| 1.Accessibility of information (20) | “…with these records online I have easier access” | “Sometimes the computer doesn’t work and I can’t access information.” n = 1 |
| 2.Suitable information (20) | “Every node included information as in real life patients” | “Some links to nodes were linked to inappropriate information” n = 1 |
| Subtheme (1d) Quality of educational resource (30) | ||
| 1.Authenticity of patient encounter (16) | “While working on this case, it was like I had to make the same decisions a doctor would make” | “I didn’t feel like being a real the doctor caring for a real patient” n = 1 |
| 2.Professional approach (14) | “I was gathering the information I needed, to characterize the problem” | “It was difficult to think which findings supported or refuted each diagnosis” n = 2 |
| Major Theme (2) Communication aspects of VP use (59) | ||
| Subtheme (2a) Students engagement (37) | ||
| 1.Use of media material (21) | “Videos add realism in the scenario and makes you want to visit quickly the next step” | “Avatars make it seem fake…better with real patients” n = 1 |
| 2.Facilitate the user discussion (12) | “You can talk and look at results together in the computer…” n = 8 | “Everybody may work alone in front of a PC” n = 4 |
| 3.Student questions (4) | “Students might have questions for the teacher that might forget, but going through the VP together may help them to remember their questions” n = 3 | “They may read what’s on the screen and forget to say something” n = 1 |
| Subtheme (2b) Student collaboration (22) | ||
| 1.Ideas sharing (13) | “Students can discuss on several different decision pathways each scenario includes” | “VPs may not discuss if it used as a self learning process” n = 4 |
| 2.Social presence (9) | “You feel like part of a ‘community’ during the corresponding teaching events.” | “Someone may feel insecure to openly share shortcomings” n = 3 |
Most participants pointed out that VPs provide the opportunity for a more thorough clinical representation of medical educational scenarios, contact with rare clinical cases, distance learning and self-assessment in a controllable learning environment. It was mentioned that “students will have the opportunity to practice in rare cases written from experts of the specific field”. Moreover, it seemed that VPs support PBL, allow for realism and cognitive errors in a safe environment and contribute to critical thinking development. As important part of the realism of the educational environment was considered the sum of wrong choices that as a part of the educational activity offer the chance to students to experiment by following different diagnostic paths and see the consequences of their choices without impact on real patients. Furthermore, it was mentioned that the whole decision tree, including the right choices, as well, contributes to effective learning. They finally pointed out that VPs improve medical education and increase motivation for learning
Fig. 2The results from the eViP evaluation tool kit for use with VPs. In all 14 questions the majority of medical students mentioned that agreed that VPs improved their learning experiences focusing on the development of clinical reasoning skills)
Student answers concerning their opinion concerning the integration of VPs in the medical curriculum with regard to sex and year of study
| Year of study | Would you like VPs to be integrated in the medical curriculum? | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes (%) | No (%) | ||
| Male | 1st-2nd year | 100.00 | 0.00 |
| 3nd- 5thyear | 88.89 | 11.11 | |
| 6thyear | 0.00 | 0.00 | |
| Pre-degree | 100.00 | 0.00 | |
| Postgraduate | 100.00 | 0.00 | |
| PhD | 100.00 | 0.00 | |
| Total | 99.25 | 0.75 | |
| Female | 1st-2ndyear | 100.00 | 0.00 |
| 3nd-5th year | 0.00 | 0.00 | |
| 6thyear | 100.00 | 0.00 | |
| Pre-degree | 83.33 | 16.67 | |
| Postgraduate | 93.75 | 6.25 | |
| PhD | 98.04 | 1.96 | |
| Total | 96.47 | 3.53 | |
| Total | 1st- 2nd year | 100.00 | 0.00 |
| 3nd- 5thyear | 88.89 | 11.11 | |
| 6thyear | 100.00 | 0.00 | |
| Pre-degree | 85.71 | 14.29 | |
| Postgraduate | 97.73 | 2.27 | |
| PhD | 98.70 | 1.30 | |
| Total | 98.17 | 1.83 | |
Student preferences concerning the ways of integration of VPs in the medical curriculum
| Additional learning activity | Additional tool for practice before exams | Tool for clinical skills acquisition before real clinical contact | Assessment tool | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes(%) | No(%) | Yes(%) | No(%) | Yes(%) | No(%) | Yes(%) | No(%) | ||
| Male | Undergraduate | 18.57 | 81.43 | 78.57 | 21.43 | 100.00 | 0.00 | 87.14 | 12.86 |
| Postgraduate | 64.29 | 35.71 | 46.43 | 53.57 | 60.71 | 39.29 | 42.86 | 57.14 | |
| PhD | 57.69 | 42.31 | 57.69 | 42.31 | 53.85 | 46.15 | 61.54 | 38.46 | |
| Female | Undergraduate | 100.00 | 0.00 | 85.71 | 14.29 | 100.00 | 0.00 | 28.57 | 71.43 |
| Postgraduate | 31.25 | 68.75 | 0.00 | 100.00 | 68.75 | 31.25 | 0.00 | 100.00 | |
| PhD | 45.10 | 54.90 | 52.94 | 47.06 | 80.39 | 19.61 | 50.98 | 49.02 | |
| Total | Undergraduate | 25.97 | 74.03 | 79.22 | 20.78 | 100.00 | 0.00 | 81.82 | 18.18 |
| Postgraduate | 52.27 | 47.73 | 29.55 | 70.45 | 63.64 | 36.36 | 27.27 | 72.73 | |
| PhD | 49.35 | 50.65 | 54.55 | 45.45 | 71.43 | 28.57 | 54.55 | 45.45 | |