Khadpe Jay, Singh Manpreet, Repanshek Zachary, Brumfield Emily, Guirgis Faheem, Kalynych Colleen, Smotherman Carmen, Lott Michelle, Husain Abbas
Emergency Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine - Jacksonville, Jacksonville, USA.
Emergency Medicine, Harbor-University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center, Torrance, USA.
Cureus. 2019 Oct 7;11(10):e5856. doi: 10.7759/cureus.5856.
Background Residency programs seek to incorporate various social media (SoMe) platforms into their educational curricula, yet little is known regarding the potential roadblocks towards implementation. Our objective was to assess the current utilization of SoMe platforms and identify common barriers to implementation by emergency medicine (EM) residency programs. Methods Members of the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD) Information Technology (IT) Committee developed an anonymous survey distributed to representatives from EM residency programs using the "CORD Community" internet forum. Descriptive statistics including percentages for numerical data as well as Fisher's exact test for categorical data were used to report results. Results We received 116 individual responses from faculty, fellows, and residents of EM residency programs. The most common institutional, departmental, technological and knowledge barriers identified were restricted access to blogs (12.9%), insufficient protected time (17.2%), insufficient IT support to host the platform (16.4%), and a lack of knowledge among faculty of how to utilize blogs (23.3%) respectively. Ten respondents (8.6%) reported that their programs had not attempted to utilize any SoMe platforms. Community-based programs and smaller programs (<24 residents) were significantly more likely to identify barriers to SoMo use among this cohort. Conclusion Utilization of SoMe platforms for resident education by EM residency programs is increasingly common, but significant obstacles exist on many levels that prevent programs from leveraging these innovations for knowledge translation. This is particularly common for community-based and small residency programs. Awareness of these common barriers will allow institutions and programs to better anticipate and design solutions to overcome these obstacles.
背景 住院医师培训项目试图将各种社交媒体平台纳入其教育课程,但对于实施过程中可能存在的障碍知之甚少。我们的目标是评估社交媒体平台的当前使用情况,并确定急诊医学住院医师培训项目实施过程中的常见障碍。方法 急诊医学住院医师培训主任委员会(CORD)信息技术委员会成员开发了一项匿名调查,通过“CORD社区”互联网论坛分发给急诊医学住院医师培训项目的代表。使用包括数值数据百分比的描述性统计以及分类数据的Fisher精确检验来报告结果。结果 我们收到了来自急诊医学住院医师培训项目的教员、研究员和住院医师的116份个人回复。确定的最常见的机构、部门、技术和知识障碍分别是博客访问受限(12.9%)、受保护时间不足(17.2%)、托管平台的信息技术支持不足(16.4%)以及教员缺乏如何使用博客的知识(23.3%)。十名受访者(8.6%)报告称他们的项目尚未尝试使用任何社交媒体平台。基于社区的项目和规模较小的项目(<24名住院医师)在这一组中更有可能识别出使用社交媒体的障碍。结论 急诊医学住院医师培训项目利用社交媒体平台进行住院医师教育越来越普遍,但在许多层面存在重大障碍,阻碍项目利用这些创新进行知识转化。这在基于社区的小型住院医师培训项目中尤为常见。了解这些常见障碍将使机构和项目能够更好地预测并设计解决方案来克服这些障碍。