School of Nursing, Department of TeleHealth, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Worldviews Evid Based Nurs. 2012 Apr;9(2):78-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1741-6787.2012.00241.x. Epub 2012 Mar 12.
Rural nurses and doctors typically have little opportunity to further their education and training. Studies have shown high participant satisfaction with the use of educational technology, such as videoconferencing, for education. A review of effectiveness of videoconference-based tele-education for medical and nursing education was conducted.
The aims of this study were to: (1) systematically review the literature and critique the research methods on studies addressing the review question: "How effective is videoconference-based education for the education of doctors and nurses?" (2) summarize the existing evidence on the effectiveness of videoconference education for medical and nursing staff; and (3) apply the findings to South Africa and other countries across the globe.
Research citations from 1990 to 2011 from cumulative index of nursing and allied health literature, Medline, Pubmed, PsycInfo, EBSCOhost, SABINET, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, the Cochrane Controlled Trial Registry, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness, unpublished abstracts through NEXUS and Internet search engines (Google/Google scholar) were searched. Review methods included searching, sifting, abstraction, and quality assessment of relevant studies by two reviewers. Studies were evaluated for sample, design, intervention, threats to validity, and outcomes. No meta-analysis was conducted as the studies provided heterogeneous outcome data.
Five studies were reviewed. Videoconference and face-to-face education is at least equivalent and one study reported an increase in knowledge and knowledge integration.
Despite the methodological limitations and heterogeneity of the reviewed studies, there appears to be sufficient evidence of effectiveness to provide a rigorous Grade B evidence-based recommendation of moderate support.
The use of videoconferencing for nursing and medical education should be encouraged along with guidelines for the use of videoconferencing. The paucity of studies and the lack of empirical precision in evaluating effectiveness of these interventions necessitate future rigorously designed experimental studies.
农村地区的护士和医生通常很少有机会接受继续教育和培训。研究表明,参与者对使用教育技术(如视频会议)进行教育非常满意。本文对基于视频会议的远程医学和护理教育的有效性进行了综述。
本研究旨在:(1)系统地回顾文献,并对研究方法进行评估,以回答以下问题:“基于视频会议的教育对医生和护士的教育效果如何?”(2)总结视频会议教育对医护人员的有效性的现有证据;(3)将研究结果应用于南非和全球其他国家。
从 1990 年到 2011 年,我们在 Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature、Medline、Pubmed、PsycInfo、EBSCOhost、SABINET、Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews、Cochrane Controlled Trial Registry、Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness、NEXUS 和互联网搜索引擎(Google/Google scholar)中搜索了 1990 年至 2011 年的研究文献。两位评审员通过搜索、筛选、摘要和质量评估对相关研究进行了评估。研究评估了样本、设计、干预、有效性威胁和结果。由于研究提供了异质的结果数据,因此未进行荟萃分析。
共审查了 5 项研究。视频会议和面对面教育至少是等效的,一项研究报告称知识和知识整合有所增加。
尽管审查的研究存在方法学局限性和异质性,但似乎有足够的有效性证据,为基于证据的严格 B 级建议提供了适度的支持。
应鼓励使用视频会议进行护理和医学教育,并制定使用视频会议的指南。由于缺乏研究和评估这些干预措施有效性的经验精度,需要未来进行严格设计的实验研究。