McQuade Casey N, Simonson Michael G, Ehrenberger Kristen A, Kohli Amar
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
JMIR Med Educ. 2023 Aug 9;9:e45277. doi: 10.2196/45277.
Case-based learning conferences are valuable to trainees, but growing clinical demands hinder consistent attendance. Social media increasingly acts as a venue for trainees to supplement their education asynchronously. We designed and implemented a web-based asynchronous clinical case discussion series on the Twitter social media platform to fill this educational gap.
The aim of this mixed methods study is to examine the nature of interactions among web-based case discussion participants and assess local attitudes regarding the educational intervention.
Starting in February 2018, we posted clinical vignettes to a dedicated Twitter account with the prompt "What else do you want to know?" to stimulate discussion. The authors replied in real time when case discussion participants requested additional details. Additional data about the case were posted at regular intervals to the discussion thread to advance the overall case discussion. Participants were asked to explain their reasoning and support their conclusions when appropriate. Web-based engagement was assessed using Twitter Analytics. Participants' posts were qualitatively analyzed for themes, with special attention to examples of using clinical reasoning skills. A codebook of types of participant posts and interactions was refined iteratively. Local engagement and attitudes at our institution were assessed by surveying internal medicine trainees (n=182) and faculty (n=165) after 6 months.
Over a 6-month period, 11 live case discussions were engaged with by users 1773 times. A total of 86 Twitter profiles spanning 22 US states and 6 countries contributed to discussions among participants and the authors. Participants from all training levels were present, ranging from students to faculty. Interactions among participants and the case moderators were most commonly driven by clinical reasoning, including hypothesis-driven information gathering, discussing the differential diagnosis, and data interpretation or organization. Of 71 respondents to the local survey, 29 (41%) reported having a Twitter account. Of the 29 respondents with Twitter accounts, 17 (59%) reported participating in the case discussions. Respondents agreed that case participation increased both their clinical reasoning skills (15/17, 88%) and clinical knowledge (13/17, 76%).
A social media-based serialized case discussion was a feasible asynchronous teaching method for engaging web-based learners of all levels in a clinical reasoning discussion. Further study should examine what factors drive trainee participation in web-based case discussions and under what circumstances asynchronous discussion might be preferred over in-person teaching activities.
基于案例的学习会议对学员很有价值,但临床需求不断增加阻碍了学员的持续参与。社交媒体越来越成为学员异步补充教育的场所。我们在推特社交媒体平台上设计并实施了一个基于网络的异步临床病例讨论系列,以填补这一教育空白。
这项混合方法研究的目的是检查基于网络的病例讨论参与者之间互动的性质,并评估当地对这种教育干预的态度。
从2018年2月开始,我们在一个专门的推特账户上发布临床病例摘要,并附上提示语“你还想知道什么?”以激发讨论。当病例讨论参与者要求提供更多细节时,作者会实时回复。关于该病例的其他数据会定期发布到讨论线程中,以推进整体病例讨论。要求参与者在适当的时候解释他们的推理并支持他们的结论。使用推特分析工具评估基于网络的参与情况。对参与者的帖子进行定性分析以找出主题,特别关注使用临床推理技能的例子。一个关于参与者帖子和互动类型的编码手册经过反复完善。在6个月后,通过对内科住院医师(n = 182)和教员(n = 165)进行调查,评估我们机构内部的参与情况和态度。
在6个月的时间里,11次现场病例讨论被用户参与了1773次。共有来自美国22个州和6个国家的86个推特账号参与了参与者与作者之间的讨论。各个培训水平的参与者都有,从学生到教员。参与者与病例主持人之间的互动最常见的驱动力是临床推理,包括假设驱动的信息收集、讨论鉴别诊断以及数据解释或整理。在当地调查的71名受访者中,29人(41%)报告有推特账号。在这29名有推特账号的受访者中,17人(59%)报告参与了病例讨论。受访者一致认为参与病例讨论提高了他们的临床推理技能(15/17,88%)和临床知识(13/17,76%)。
基于社交媒体的系列病例讨论是一种可行的异步教学方法,可让各级基于网络的学习者参与临床推理讨论。进一步的研究应考察哪些因素推动学员参与基于网络的病例讨论,以及在何种情况下异步讨论可能比面对面教学活动更受青睐。