Hoffman Samantha E, Vega Rafael A, Stippler Martina
1Harvard Medical School, Boston; and.
2Department of Neurosurgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Neurosurg Focus. 2022 Aug;53(2):E7. doi: 10.3171/2022.5.FOCUS22171.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic disrupted the landscape of traditional neurosurgical subinternships, ramifications of which persist to this day. The outright cancellation of in-person subinternships in 2020 presented not only a challenge to both applicants and programs, but also an opportunity to establish an effective and efficient platform for virtual neurosurgical training. To address this need, the authors designed and trialed a novel virtual neurosurgical subinternship (Virtual Sub-I).
The weeklong, case-based Virtual Sub-I program combined flipped-classroom and active learning approaches. Students worked in small groups to discuss neurosurgical cases. Faculty and residents offered personalized mentorship sessions to participants. Surveys were used to assess students' experience with the authors' subinternship program, consistent with level 1 of the Kirkpatrick model.
A total of 132 students applied from both international and American medical schools. The final cohort comprised 27 students, of whom 8 (30%) were female and 19 (70%) were male. Students characterized the subinternship as "interactive," "educational," and "engaging." One hundred percent of survey respondents were "very likely" to recommend the Virtual Sub-I to their peers. Faculty involved in the Virtual Sub-I stated that the program allowed them to determine the fit of participating medical students for their neurosurgery residency program, and that information gathered from the Virtual Sub-I had the potential to influence their ranking decisions.
The Virtual Sub-I recapitulates the educational and interpersonal benefits of the traditional subinternship experience and can serve as a prototype for future virtual surgical education endeavors. Furthermore, the Virtual Sub-I presents a more equitable platform for introducing medical students across the undergraduate medical education spectrum to neurosurgical education and mentorship.
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行扰乱了传统神经外科实习的局面,其影响至今仍在。2020年面对面实习的直接取消,不仅给申请者和项目带来了挑战,也为建立一个有效且高效的虚拟神经外科培训平台提供了契机。为满足这一需求,作者设计并试行一种新型虚拟神经外科实习(虚拟实习)。
为期一周的基于病例的虚拟实习项目结合了翻转课堂和主动学习方法。学生分组讨论神经外科病例。教员和住院医师为参与者提供个性化辅导课程。采用调查问卷评估学生对作者实习项目的体验,这与柯克帕特里克模型的一级水平一致。
共有132名学生从国际和美国医学院申请参加。最终学员包括27名学生,其中8名(30%)为女性,19名(70%)为男性。学生们将实习描述为“互动性强”“有教育意义”和“引人入胜”。100%的调查受访者“非常有可能”向同龄人推荐虚拟实习。参与虚拟实习的教员表示,该项目使他们能够确定参与的医学生是否适合他们的神经外科住院医师项目,并且从虚拟实习中收集的信息有可能影响他们的排名决定。
虚拟实习概括了传统实习经历的教育和人际效益,可作为未来虚拟外科教育努力的一个范例。此外,虚拟实习为将本科医学教育各阶段的医学生引入神经外科教育和辅导提供了一个更公平的平台。