Nagappan Palaniappan Ganesh, Brown Samuel, McManus Alex, Sayers Sarah, Absar Shazia, Tan Sapphire Rou Xi, Kuhn Isla, Lau Edward, Tulinius Charlotte
School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Mar 11;14(3):e078252. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-078252.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on medical education, with many institutions shifting to online learning to ensure the safety of students and staff. However, there has been a decline in in-person attendance at medical schools across the UK and worldwide following the relaxation of social distancing rules and the reinstation of in-person teaching. Importantly, this trend has been observed prior to the pandemic. While reflected within the literature, there is currently no systematic review describing these changes. We aim to find out how medical students' attendance is changing as documented within the literature and its impact on their educational outcomes.
This systematic review will follow the guidelines of the Centre of Research and Dissemination, Meta-analyses of Observational Studies in Epidemiology and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses. We will search the major databases of Medline via Ovid, Embase via Ovid, Scopus, Web of Science, British Education Index via EBSCOhost and ERIC via EBSCOhost.Two reviewers will independently screen each paper and extract data, with a third reviewer for dispute resolution. All studies reporting on medical students from various universities, both graduate and undergraduate and describing changes in attendance and/or students' educational outcomes will be included. Risk of bias in individual studies will be assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale and confidence in cumulative evidence will be evaluated using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation-Confidence in the Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative Research approach. A narrative synthesis of the findings from all included studies will be reported.
Ethical approval is not required for this systematic review of existing publicly available literature. We will subsequently aim to publish the results of this systematic review in a peer-reviewed journal.
新冠疫情对医学教育产生了重大影响,许多机构转向在线学习以确保学生和教职员工的安全。然而,在社交距离规则放宽和恢复面对面教学后,英国乃至全球医学院校的现场出勤率都有所下降。重要的是,这一趋势在疫情之前就已出现。虽然文献中有相关反映,但目前尚无系统综述描述这些变化。我们旨在了解医学文献中记录的医学生出勤率是如何变化的,以及这对他们的教育成果有何影响。
本系统综述将遵循研究与传播中心、流行病学观察性研究的元分析以及系统综述和元分析的首选报告项目的指南。我们将通过Ovid搜索Medline的主要数据库、通过Ovid搜索Embase、Scopus、科学网、通过EBSCOhost搜索英国教育索引以及通过EBSCOhost搜索教育资源信息中心。两名评审员将独立筛选每篇论文并提取数据,第三名评审员负责解决争议。所有报告来自不同大学的医学生(包括研究生和本科生)并描述出勤率变化和/或学生教育成果的研究都将被纳入。将使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表评估个体研究的偏倚风险,并使用推荐分级、评估、制定和评价——对定性研究综述证据的信心方法评估对累积证据的信心。将报告所有纳入研究结果的叙述性综合。
对现有公开文献进行的本系统综述无需伦理批准。我们随后旨在将本系统综述的结果发表在同行评审期刊上。