Wiet Ryan, Casanova Madeline P, Moore Jonathan D, Deming Sarah M, Baker Russell T
WWAMI Medical Education Program, Idaho Office of Underserved and Rural Medical Research, University of Idaho, 875 Perimeter Drive, Moscow, ID, 83843, United States.
JMIR Med Educ. 2025 Mar 21;11:e55313. doi: 10.2196/55313.
Project ECHO (Extension for Community Health Outcomes) is an innovative program that uses videoconferencing technology to connect health care providers with experts. The model has been successful in reaching health care providers in rural and underserved areas and positively impacting clinical practice. ECHO Idaho, a replication partner, has developed programming that has increased knowledge and confidence of health care professionals throughout the state of Idaho, United States. Although the ECHO model has a demonstrated ability to recruit, educate, and train health care providers, barriers to attending Project ECHO continuing education (CE) programs remain. The asynchronous nature of podcasts could be used as an innovative medium to help address barriers to CE access that health care professionals face. The ECHO Idaho "Something for the Pain" podcast was developed to increase CE accessibility to rural and frontier providers, while upscaling their knowledge of and competence to treat and assess substance use disorders, pain, and behavioral health conditions.
This paper describes the creation and preliminary assessment of the ECHO Idaho "Something for the Pain" podcast.
Podcast episodes consisted of interviews with individuals as well as didactic lectures. Audio from these recordings were edited for content and length and then professionally reviewed by subject matter experts (eg, featured episode speakers). Target audiences consisted of health care providers and community members interested in behavioral health and substance use disorders. Metrics on podcast listeners were assessed using SoundCloud's RSS feed, continuing education survey completion, and iECHO.
The ECHO Idaho "Something for the Pain" podcast's inaugural season comprised 14 episodes with 626 minutes of CE material. The podcast series received a total of 2441 listens from individuals in 14 different cities across Idaho, and 63 health care providers listened and claimed CE credits. The largest professional group was social workers (n=22; 35%).
We provide preliminary evidence that podcasts can be used to provide health care providers with opportunities to access CE material. Health care providers listened to and claimed CE credits from the ECHO Idaho "Something for the Pain" podcast. Project ECHO programs should consider creating podcasts as an additional platform for disseminating ECHO material.
社区卫生成果拓展计划(Project ECHO)是一项创新项目,利用视频会议技术将医疗服务提供者与专家联系起来。该模式已成功覆盖农村和医疗服务不足地区的医疗服务提供者,并对临床实践产生了积极影响。爱达荷州的ECHO项目作为复制合作伙伴,已开发出相关课程,提高了美国爱达荷州各地医疗专业人员的知识水平和信心。尽管ECHO模式已证明有能力招募、教育和培训医疗服务提供者,但参加Project ECHO继续教育(CE)项目仍存在障碍。播客的异步性质可作为一种创新媒介,帮助解决医疗专业人员在获取CE方面面临的障碍。爱达荷州ECHO的“疼痛应对之法”播客旨在提高农村和偏远地区医疗服务提供者获取CE的机会,同时提升他们治疗和评估物质使用障碍、疼痛及行为健康状况的知识和能力。
本文描述了爱达荷州ECHO的“疼痛应对之法”播客的创建及初步评估情况。
播客剧集包括人物访谈和教学讲座。对这些录音的音频进行内容和时长编辑,然后由主题专家(如专题剧集演讲者)进行专业审核。目标受众包括对行为健康和物质使用障碍感兴趣的医疗服务提供者和社区成员。使用SoundCloud的RSS源、继续教育调查完成情况和iECHO评估播客听众的相关指标。
爱达荷州ECHO的“疼痛应对之法”播客首个季共有14集,包含626分钟的CE材料。该播客系列在爱达荷州14个不同城市的个人中总共获得了2441次收听,63名医疗服务提供者收听并获得了CE学分。最大的专业群体是社会工作者(n = 22;35%)。
我们提供了初步证据,证明播客可用于为医疗服务提供者提供获取CE材料的机会。医疗服务提供者收听了爱达荷州ECHO的“疼痛应对之法”播客并获得了CE学分。Project ECHO项目应考虑创建播客,作为传播ECHO材料的额外平台。