Craddock Megan F, Blondin Heather M, Youssef Molly J, Tollefson Megha M, Hill Lauren F, Hanson Janice L, Bruckner Anna L
Department of Dermatology, School of Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.
Pediatr Dermatol. 2018 Jan;35(1):64-69. doi: 10.1111/pde.13323. Epub 2017 Nov 29.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Pediatricians manage skin conditions such as atopic dermatitis (AD) but report that their dermatologic training is inadequate. Online modules may enhance medical education when sufficient didactic or clinical teaching experiences are lacking. We assessed whether an online module about AD improved pediatric residents' knowledge and changed their clinical management of AD.
Target and control cohorts of pediatric residents from two institutions were recruited. Target subjects took a 30-question test about AD early in their residency, reviewed the online module, and repeated the test 6 months and 1 year later. The control subjects, who had 1 year of clinical experience but had not reviewed the online module, also took the test. The mean percentage of correct answers was calculated and compared using two-sided, two-sample independent t tests and repeated-measures analysis of variance. For a subset of participants, clinical documentation from AD encounters was reviewed and 13 practice behaviors were compared using the Fisher exact test.
Twenty-five subjects in the target cohort and 29 subjects in the control cohort completed the study. The target cohort improved from 18.0 ± 3.2 to 23.4 ± 3.4 correctly answered questions over 1 year (P < .001). This final value was greater than that of the control cohort (20.7 ± 4.5; P = .01). Meaningful differences in practice behaviors were not seen.
Pediatric residents who reviewed an online module about AD demonstrated statistically significant improvement in disease-specific knowledge over time and had statistically significantly higher scores than controls. Online dermatology education may effectively supplement traditional clinical teaching.
背景/目的:儿科医生负责处理诸如特应性皮炎(AD)等皮肤疾病,但他们表示自己的皮肤科培训不足。当缺乏足够的理论或临床教学经验时,在线模块可能会加强医学教育。我们评估了一个关于AD的在线模块是否能提高儿科住院医师的知识水平,并改变他们对AD的临床管理。
招募了来自两个机构的儿科住院医师作为目标组和对照组。目标组受试者在住院医师培训初期接受了一次关于AD的30道题测试,复习了在线模块,并在6个月和1年后再次进行测试。对照组受试者有1年临床经验但未复习在线模块,他们也参加了测试。计算正确答案的平均百分比,并使用双侧双样本独立t检验和重复测量方差分析进行比较。对于一部分参与者,审查了AD诊疗记录,并使用Fisher精确检验比较了13种实践行为。
目标组25名受试者和对照组29名受试者完成了研究。目标组在1年时间里正确回答的问题从18.0±3.2提高到23.4±3.4(P<.001)。这个最终值高于对照组(20.7±4.5;P=.01)。在实践行为方面未发现有意义的差异。
复习了关于AD的在线模块的儿科住院医师在特定疾病知识方面随时间有统计学上的显著提高,且得分在统计学上显著高于对照组。在线皮肤科教育可能有效地补充传统临床教学。