Reiter-Campeau Sandra, Lubarsky Stuart, Chalk Colin H, Buyukkurt Asli, Levesque-Roy Myriam, Clouatre Ana, Benea Diana, Rahman Tasnia, Moore Fraser
From the Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery (S.R.-C., S.L., C.H.C., A.B., M.L.-R., T.R., F.M.), Institute for Health Sciences Education (S.L., C.H.C., F.M.), and Faculty of Medicine (A.C., D.B.), McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Neurol Educ. 2023 Jul 14;2(3):e200083. doi: 10.1212/NE9.0000000000200083. eCollection 2023 Sep 25.
Virtual teaching sessions during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic were challenging for students and teachers but were also an opportunity to find creative ways to teach physical examination skills, including the neurologic examination. We examined expert opinions of the pros and cons that arise using a virtual platform to teach the neurologic examination and strategies to best address these challenges.
This was a qualitative study incorporating a focus group of faculty and resident neurologists. Data were coded using conventional content analysis. An interpretivist, social constructionist approach was used to look for interesting or novel ideas, rather than testing a specific hypothesis. Three independent auditors performed a dependability and confirmability audit to confirm that the themes accurately reflected the data.
A single focus group was used. Four of the 6 participants were faculty neurologists and 2 were neurology residents. Five themes were identified: (1) learning the neurologic examination is complex, (2) lack of physical contact is the most important drawback of virtual teaching, (3) virtual teaching can effectively emphasize the organization of the examination, (4) virtual sessions can facilitate combined teaching of technique and demonstration of abnormalities, and (5) virtual platforms do not necessarily imply reduced participation.
Teaching the neurologic examination is a multifaceted process that should emphasize not only technique but also an overall approach to performing and documenting the examination. Many aspects of the neurologic examination can be appropriately taught virtually using various strategies, although there may always be some limitations. Virtual education can play a useful role for future curriculum design and global education.
在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,虚拟教学课程对学生和教师来说都具有挑战性,但同时也是寻找创造性方法来教授体格检查技能(包括神经学检查)的契机。我们研究了使用虚拟平台教授神经学检查的利弊的专家意见以及应对这些挑战的最佳策略。
这是一项定性研究,纳入了一个由神经科教员和住院医师组成的焦点小组。数据采用常规内容分析法进行编码。采用解释主义、社会建构主义方法来寻找有趣或新颖的观点,而不是检验特定假设。三名独立审核员进行了可靠性和可证实性审核,以确认这些主题准确反映了数据。
使用了一个单一的焦点小组。6名参与者中有4名是神经科教员,2名是神经科住院医师。确定了五个主题:(1)学习神经学检查很复杂,(2)缺乏身体接触是虚拟教学最重要的缺点,(3)虚拟教学可以有效地强调检查的组织,(4)虚拟课程可以促进技术教学与异常表现演示的结合,(5)虚拟平台不一定意味着参与度降低。
教授神经学检查是一个多方面的过程,不仅应强调技术,还应强调进行检查和记录检查的整体方法。尽管可能总是存在一些局限性,但神经学检查的许多方面可以通过各种策略在虚拟环境中进行适当教学。虚拟教育可以在未来的课程设计和全球教育中发挥有益作用。