Department of Surgery, Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center, Hartford, Connecticut; Department of Surgery, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut.
Department of Surgery, Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center, Hartford, Connecticut.
J Surg Educ. 2017 Nov-Dec;74(6):986-991. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2017.05.010. Epub 2017 May 22.
We sought to determine if a daily gamified microblogging project improves American Board of Surgery In-Service Training Examination (ABSITE) scores for participants.
In July 2016, we instituted a gamified microblogging project using Twitter as the platform and modified questions from one of several available question banks. A question of the day was posted at 7-o׳clock each morning, Monday through Friday. Respondents were awarded points for speed, accuracy, and contribution to discussion topics. The moderator challenged respondents by asking additional questions and prompted them to find evidence for their claims to fuel further discussion. Since 4 months into the microblogging program, a survey was administered to all residents. Responses were collected and analyzed. After 6 months of tweeting, residents took the ABSITE examination. We compared participating residents׳ ABSITE percentile rank to those of their nonparticipating peers. We also compared residents׳ percentile rank from 2016 to those in 2017 after their participation in the microblogging project.
The University of Connecticut general surgery residency is an integrated program that is decentralized across 5 hospitals in the central Connecticut region, including Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center, located in Hartford.
We advertised our account to the University of Connecticut general surgery residents. Out of 45 residents, 11 participated in Twitter microblogging (24.4%) and 17 responded to the questionnaire (37.8%).
In all, 100% of the residents who were participating in Twitter reported that daily microblogging prompted them to engage in academic reading. Twitter participants significantly increased their ABSITE percentile rank from 2016 to 2017 by an average of 13.7% (±14.1%) while nonparticipants on average decreased their ABSITE percentile rank by 10.0% (±16.6) (p = 0.003).
Microblogging via Twitter with gamification is a feasible strategy to facilitate improving performance on the ABSITE, especially in a geographically distributed residency.
我们旨在确定每日游戏化微博项目是否能提高美国外科委员会住院医师培训结业考试(ABSITE)成绩。
2016 年 7 月,我们使用 Twitter 作为平台,从几个可用题库中修改问题,启动了一个游戏化微博项目。每天早上 7 点,周一至周五,我们会在平台上发布一个当日问题。参与者的回答速度、准确性和对讨论话题的贡献会获得积分。主持人会通过提出额外的问题来挑战参与者,并促使他们寻找证据来支持自己的观点,以引发进一步的讨论。在微博项目进行了 4 个月后,我们向所有住院医师发放了一份调查问卷。收集并分析了调查结果。在发推 6 个月后,住院医师参加了 ABSITE 考试。我们将参与住院医师的 ABSITE 百分位排名与未参与的同事进行了比较。我们还比较了 2016 年和 2017 年参与微博项目后的住院医师的百分位排名。
康涅狄格大学普通外科住院医师培训计划是一个综合项目,分散在康涅狄格州中部的 5 家医院,包括哈特福德的圣弗朗西斯医院和医疗中心。
我们向康涅狄格大学普通外科住院医师宣传了我们的账号。在 45 名住院医师中,有 11 人参与了 Twitter 微博(24.4%),17 人回复了问卷(37.8%)。
所有参与 Twitter 的住院医师都表示,每日微博提示他们进行学术阅读。与 2016 年相比,2017 年参与微博项目的住院医师 ABSITE 百分位排名平均提高了 13.7%(±14.1%),而非参与者的 ABSITE 百分位排名平均下降了 10.0%(±16.6%)(p = 0.003)。
通过 Twitter 进行微博游戏化是一种可行的策略,可以促进提高 ABSITE 成绩,尤其是在地理上分散的住院医师培训中。