Abstract

BackgroundGlobally, half of all years of life lost is due to emergency medical conditions, with low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) facing a disproportionate burden of these conditions. There is an urgent need to train the future physicians in LMICs in the identification and stabilization of patients with emergency medical conditions. Little research focuses on the development of effective emergency medicine (EM) medical education resources in LMICs and the perspectives of the students themselves. One emerging tool is the use of electronic learning (e-learning) and blended learning courses. We aimed to understand Uganda medical trainees’ use of learning materials, perception of current e-learning resources, and perceived needs regarding EM skills acquisition during participation in an app-based EM course.MethodsWe conducted semi-structured interviews and focus groups of medical students and EM residents. Participants were recruited using convenience sampling. All sessions were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. The final codebook was approved by three separate investigators, transcripts were coded after reaching consensus by all members of the coding team, and coded data were thematically analyzed.ResultsTwenty-six medical trainees were included in the study. Analysis of the transcripts revealed three major themes: [1] medical trainees want education in EM and actively seek EM training opportunities; [2] although the e-learning course supplements knowledge acquisition, medical students are most interested in hands-on EM-related training experiences; and [3] medical students want increased time with local physician educators that blended courses provide.ConclusionsOur findings show that while students lack access to structured EM education, they actively seek EM knowledge and practice experiences through self-identified, unstructured learning opportunities. Students value high quality, easily accessible EM education resources and employ e-learning resources to bridge gaps in their learning opportunities. However, students desire that these resources be complemented by in-person educational sessions and executed in collaboration with local EM experts who are able to contextualize materials, offer mentorship, and help students develop their interest in EM to continue the growth of the EM specialty.

Highlights

  • Half of all years of life lost is due to emergency medical conditions, with low- and middleincome countries (LMICs) facing a disproportionate burden of these conditions

  • Globally, half of all years of life lost is due to emergency medical conditions, with low-income countries facing over four times the burden of emergency medical

  • Our study aims to understand the perspectives of Ugandan medical students and emergency medicine (EM) residents on needs and resource utilization for EM education, including the role of blended app-based EM courses to address a lack of EM focused curricular offerings

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Half of all years of life lost is due to emergency medical conditions, with low- and middleincome countries (LMICs) facing a disproportionate burden of these conditions. There is an urgent need to train the future physicians in LMICs in the identification and stabilization of patients with emergency medical conditions. Little research focuses on the development of effective emergency medicine (EM) medical education resources in LMICs and the perspectives of the students themselves. Half of all years of life lost is due to emergency medical conditions, with low-income countries facing over four times the burden of emergency medical. There is an urgent need to train current providers, but the generation of LMIC physicians and healthcare providers in the identification and management of emergency medical conditions [4, 5]. EM residency training programs are growing throughout Africa, their numbers and geographic distribution remain limited [9]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call