Fernandez Andres, Moeller Jeremy J, Harrar Dana B, Guerriero Rejean M, Pathmanathan Jay, Agarwal Nitin, Madan Cohen Jennifer, Kephart Amy, Lado Fred A, Sahaya Kinshuk, Weber Daniel J
From the Department of Neurology (A.F.), Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA; Department of Neurology (J.J.M.), Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; Department of Neurology (D.B.H.), Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (R.M.G.), Washington University School of Medicine and St. Louis Childrens Hospital, MO; Department of Neurology (J.P.), University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; Minnesota Epilepsy Group, P.A. (N.A., K.S.), Roseville, MN; Division of Pediatric Neurology (J.M.C.), Connecticut Childrens, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Hartford, CT; American Epilepsy Society (A.K.), Chicago, IL; Department of Neurology (F.A.L.), Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Great Neck, NY; and Department of Neurology (D.J.W.), St. Louis University, MO.
Neurol Educ. 2023 Nov 14;2(4):e200101. doi: 10.1212/NE9.0000000000200101. eCollection 2023 Dec 22.
There is a need for structured EEG education opportunities to enhance neurology resident education. To address this need, the American Epilepsy Society (AES) supported the development and implementation of both synchronous and asynchronous EEG courses.
To produce EEG curricula that enhance resident EEG learning, increase interest in EEG and improve participants' knowledge, and to ensure that courses were highly used and available to the broadest range of learners.
A multi-institutional group of EEG educators developed both courses. The synchronous curriculum consisted of a mixture of brief "mini-lectures" and interactive small group activities with self-assessment quizzes at the start and end of the course. The online asynchronous EEG curriculum consisted of self-directed slide sets, multiple-choice self-assessment quizzes and a structured EEG self-assessment tool. Courses were evaluated using postcourse surveys, analysis of pretest and posttest data, and analysis of user data from the asynchronous curriculum.
Between 2019 and 2021, 56 residents participated in the synchronous EEG courses. On the resident survey, mean Likert scores for course design, planning, and learning outcomes ranged from 4.6 to 5.0 for the in-person courses and from 3.9 to 4.5 for the virtual course. On the 24-item pretests and posttests, overall median scores increased from 60% (14.5/24) to 75% (18/24; < 0.001). More than 2,300 learners completed the first submodule of the asynchronous curriculum, but only 164 completed all sections. Most of those who completed the asynchronous curriculum reported that it was effective and appropriate for resident-level learning.
The AES EEG courses provide EEG learning opportunities for neurology residents beyond what is available at their home institutions. There is evidence for the effectiveness of the synchronous course, but the scope is limited to a small number of attendees. The asynchronous curriculum is more broadly available, but very few learners completed all elements. Future steps will include expansion of the in-person synchronous course and providing guidance to learners about the core and optional components of the asynchronous curriculum to increase the impact of both educational offerings.
需要有结构化的脑电图(EEG)教育机会来加强神经科住院医师的教育。为满足这一需求,美国癫痫协会(AES)支持了同步和异步EEG课程的开发与实施。
制定能加强住院医师EEG学习、提高对EEG的兴趣并提升参与者知识水平的EEG课程,并确保课程得到广泛使用且能供最广泛的学习者使用。
一个多机构的EEG教育者团队开发了这两门课程。同步课程包括简短的“迷你讲座”以及互动式小组活动,并在课程开始和结束时进行自我评估测验。在线异步EEG课程包括自主学习的幻灯片集、多项选择题自我评估测验以及一个结构化的EEG自我评估工具。通过课程后调查、对前测和后测数据的分析以及对异步课程用户数据的分析来评估课程。
在2019年至2021年期间,56名住院医师参加了同步EEG课程。在住院医师调查中,面对面课程在课程设计、规划和学习成果方面的平均李克特评分在4.6至5.0之间,虚拟课程的评分在3.9至4.5之间。在24项的前测和后测中,总体中位数分数从60%(14.5/24)提高到了75%(18/24;P<0.001)。超过2300名学习者完成了异步课程的第一个子模块,但只有164人完成了所有部分。大多数完成异步课程的人报告说,该课程对住院医师水平的学习有效且合适。
AES的EEG课程为神经科住院医师提供了超出其所在机构所能提供的EEG学习机会。有证据表明同步课程是有效的,但范围仅限于少数参与者。异步课程的覆盖面更广,但很少有学习者完成所有内容。未来的步骤将包括扩大面对面同步课程,并为学习者提供关于异步课程核心和可选组件的指导,以增强这两种教育课程的影响。