Mathematical and Computational Science Program, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Department of Computer Science, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2018 Nov 20;18(1):269. doi: 10.1186/s12909-018-1385-x.
Medical students and healthcare professionals can benefit from exposure to cross-disciplinary teamwork and core concepts of medical innovation. Indeed, to address complex challenges in patient care, diversity in collaboration across medicine, engineering, business, and design is critical. However, a limited number of academic institutions have established cross-disciplinary opportunities for students and young professionals within these domains to work collaboratively towards diverse healthcare needs.
Drawing upon best practices from computer science and engineering, healthcare hackathons bring together interdisciplinary teams of students and professionals to collaborate, brainstorm, and build solutions to unmet clinical needs. Over the course of six months, a committee of 20 undergraduates, medical students, and physician advisors organized Stanford University's first healthcare hackathon (November 2016). Demographic data from initial applications were supplemented with responses from a post-hackathon survey gauging themes of diversity in collaboration, professional development, interest in medical innovation, and educational value. In designing and evaluating the event, the committee focused on measurable outcomes of diversity across participants (skillset, age, gender, academic degree), ideas (clinical needs), and innovations (projects).
Demographic data (n = 587 applicants, n = 257 participants) reveal participants across diverse academic backgrounds, age groups, and domains of expertise were in attendance. From 50 clinical needs presented representing 19 academic fields, 40 teams ultimately formed and submitted projects spanning web (n = 13) and mobile applications (n = 13), artificial intelligence-based tools (n = 6), and medical devices (n = 3), among others. In post-hackathon survey responses (n = 111), medical students and healthcare professionals alike noted a positive impact on their ability to work in multidisciplinary teams, learn from individuals of different backgrounds, and address complex healthcare challenges.
Healthcare hackathons can encourage diversity across individuals, ideas, and projects to address clinical challenges. By providing an outline of Stanford's inaugural event, we hope more universities can adopt the healthcare hackathon model to promote diversity in collaboration in medicine.
医学生和医疗保健专业人员可以从跨学科团队合作和医学创新核心概念的学习中受益。事实上,为了解决患者护理中的复杂挑战,医学、工程、商业和设计领域的跨学科合作至关重要。然而,只有少数学术机构为这些领域的学生和年轻专业人员提供了跨学科机会,让他们共同努力,满足多样化的医疗需求。
借鉴计算机科学和工程领域的最佳实践,医疗保健黑客马拉松将跨学科的学生和专业人员团队聚集在一起,共同协作、集思广益,为未满足的临床需求构建解决方案。在六个月的时间里,由 20 名本科生、医学生和医生顾问组成的委员会组织了斯坦福大学的第一次医疗保健黑客马拉松(2016 年 11 月)。初始申请的人口统计数据补充了黑客马拉松后调查的回复,该调查旨在评估合作多样性、专业发展、对医学创新的兴趣和教育价值等主题。在设计和评估活动时,委员会重点关注参与者(技能、年龄、性别、学历)、创意(临床需求)和创新(项目)方面的多样性。
人口统计数据(n=587 名申请人,n=257 名参与者)显示,来自不同学术背景、年龄组和专业领域的参与者都出席了活动。从代表 19 个学术领域的 50 个临床需求中,最终形成了 40 个团队并提交了项目,涵盖了网络(n=13)和移动应用程序(n=13)、基于人工智能的工具(n=6)和医疗设备(n=3)等领域。在黑客马拉松后的调查回复(n=111)中,医学生和医疗保健专业人员都表示,这对他们在多学科团队中工作的能力、向不同背景的人学习以及解决复杂的医疗保健挑战的能力产生了积极影响。
医疗保健黑客马拉松可以鼓励个人、创意和项目的多样性,以解决临床挑战。通过介绍斯坦福大学的首届活动,我们希望更多的大学能够采用医疗保健黑客马拉松模式,促进医学领域的合作多样性。