University of Michigan Medical School, 48103, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
St.Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College, 1271 Swaziland Street, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
BMC Med Educ. 2021 Dec 9;21(1):605. doi: 10.1186/s12909-021-03038-3.
The African continent currently experiences 25% of the global burden of disease with only 1.3% of the world's healthcare workers. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented disruption to medical education systems, increasing the strain on already-vulnerable regions. Our study examines the impact of COVID-19 on medical students across 33 countries in the African continent.
A 39-item anonymous electronic survey was developed and distributed to medical students across Africa through social networks to assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on medical education. The survey assessed the domains of: class structure changes and timing, patient interactions, exam administration, learning environment satisfaction, mental health impacts, and volunteer opportunities/engagement.
694 students across 33 countries participated. 80% of respondents had their classes suspended for varied lengths of time during the pandemic, and from these students 59% of them resumed their classes. 83% of students felt they were in a supportive learning environment before the pandemic, which dropped to 32% since the start. The proportion of students taking exams online increased (6-26%, p<0.001) and there was a decrease in the proportion of students seeing patients as a part of their education (72-19%, p<0.001).
COVID-19 is harming medical students in Africa and is likely to worsen the shortage of the future's healthcare workforce in the region. Pandemic-related impacts have led to a degradation of the learning environment of medical students. Medical schools have shifted online to differing degrees and direct patient-care in training of students has decreased. This study highlights the urgent need for flexible and innovative approaches to medical education in Africa.
非洲大陆目前承担着全球 25%的疾病负担,而其医疗工作者仅占全球的 1.3%。新冠疫情大流行给医学教育系统带来了前所未有的冲击,使本已脆弱的地区更加不堪重负。我们的研究调查了新冠疫情对非洲大陆 33 个国家的医学生的影响。
我们开发了一份 39 项匿名电子调查问卷,并通过社交网络分发给非洲各地的医学生,以评估新冠疫情对医学教育的影响。该调查评估了以下领域:课程结构变化和时间安排、医患互动、考试管理、学习环境满意度、心理健康影响以及志愿者机会/参与度。
来自 33 个国家的 694 名学生参与了调查。80%的受访者表示,在疫情期间,他们的课程暂停了不同的时间长度,其中 59%的人已经恢复上课。83%的学生在疫情前感到自己处于支持性的学习环境中,而这一比例自疫情开始以来下降到 32%。在线参加考试的学生比例增加(6-26%,p<0.001),而作为教育一部分的学生看诊比例下降(72-19%,p<0.001)。
新冠疫情正在损害非洲的医学生,并可能使该地区未来医疗工作者的短缺状况恶化。与疫情相关的影响导致医学生的学习环境恶化。医学院已在不同程度上转向线上教学,学生的直接临床实习减少。本研究强调了非洲急需灵活和创新的医学教育方法。