Health Services Research Unit, Singapore General Hospital, SingHealth Tower Level 16, 10 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168582, Singapore.
Department of Rheumatology and Immunology, Singapore General Hospital, SingHealth Tower Level 16, 10 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168582, Singapore.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Jun 3;22(1):428. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03454-z.
There is a need to reexamine Singapore's medical school curricula in light of the increasing digitalization of healthcare. Notwithstanding Singapore's digital competitiveness, there is a perceived gap in preparing its medical students for the digital age. Furthermore, limited research has evaluated the extent to which skills in using digital technologies should be taught to medical students in Asian medical schools to prepare them for future clinical practice- a gap that is filled by this study. Using Singapore as a case study, it explores the views of some local clinical educators and teachers towards the need to impart skills in digital technologies to medical students. It also offers recommendations on ways to balance the clinicians' concerns about these technologies with the digital competencies needed for clinical practice.
Findings were drawn from individual interviews with 33 clinical educators and teachers from Singapore's public and private healthcare sectors. They were recruited using purposive sampling. Data were interpreted using qualitative thematic analysis.
Participants included vice deans of education from all three local medical schools and senior consultants from a wide variety of disciplines. Overall, they acknowledged two benefits of equipping students with skills in digital technologies including promoting the culture of innovation and improving work efficiency. However, they also highlighted four main concerns of imparting these skills: (i) erosion of basic clinical skills, (ii) neglect of a generalist approach to healthcare characterized by holistic management of patients, inter-professional collaboration, and commitment to breadth of practice within each specialty, (iii) rapid pace of technological advances, and (iv) de-personalisation by technology.
The findings show that medical students in Singapore would benefit from a curriculum that teaches them to use digital technologies alongside core clinical skills.
随着医疗保健数字化程度的不断提高,有必要重新审视新加坡医学院的课程设置。尽管新加坡在数字化方面具有竞争力,但在培养医学生适应数字时代方面,人们认为存在差距。此外,鲜有研究评估亚洲医学院应在多大程度上教授医学生使用数字技术的技能,本研究填补了这一空白。本文以新加坡为例,探讨了一些当地临床教育者和教师对向医学生传授数字技术技能的必要性的看法。它还就如何平衡临床医生对这些技术的担忧与临床实践所需的数字能力提供了建议。
从新加坡公立和私立医疗保健部门的 33 名临床教育者和教师的个人访谈中提取研究结果。他们是通过目的性抽样招募的。使用定性主题分析对数据进行解释。
参与者包括来自三所本地医学院的教育副院长和来自广泛学科的高级顾问。总的来说,他们承认为学生配备数字技术技能有两个好处,包括促进创新文化和提高工作效率。然而,他们也强调了传授这些技能的四个主要关注点:(i)侵蚀基本临床技能,(ii)忽视以整体医疗保健为特征的通才方法,包括全面管理患者、跨专业合作以及致力于每个专业的实践广度,(iii)技术进步的快速步伐,以及(iv)技术的去人性化。
研究结果表明,新加坡的医学生将受益于教授他们使用数字技术与核心临床技能的课程。