Abstract

BackgroundThe use of video cases to demonstrate key signs and symptoms in patients (patient video cases or PVCs) is a rapidly expanding field. The aims of this study were to evaluate whether the technical quality, or judgement of quality, of a video clip influences a paediatrician’s judgment on acuity of the case and assess the relationship between perception of quality and the technical quality of a selection of video clips.MethodsParticipants (12 senior consultant paediatricians attending an examination workshop) individually categorised 28 PVCs into one of 3 possible acuities and then described the quality of the image seen. The PVCs had been converted into four different technical qualities (differing bit rates ranging from excellent to low quality).ResultsParticipants’ assessment of quality and the actual industry standard of the PVC were independent (333 distinct observations, spearmans rho = 0.0410, p = 0.4564). Agreement between actual acuity and participants’ judgement was generally good at higher acuities but moderate at medium/low acuities of illness (overall correlation 0.664). Perception of the quality of the clip was related to correct assignment of acuity regardless of the technical quality of the clip (number of obs = 330, z = 2.07, p = 0.038).ConclusionsIt is important to benchmark PVCs prior to use in learning resources as experts may not agree on the information within, or quality of, the clip. It appears, although PVCs may be beneficial in a pedagogical context, the perception of quality of clip may be an important determinant of an expert’s decision making.

Highlights

  • The use of video cases to demonstrate key signs and symptoms in patients is a rapidly expanding field

  • The knowledge and learning obtained from patient video cases (PVCs) is dependent on a number of factors that have yet to be determined

  • Information content, technical quality, monitor fidelity, bandwidth availability, processing speed and interference from other electronic devices all may influence learning from Patient Video Cases [4]

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Summary

Introduction

The use of video cases to demonstrate key signs and symptoms in patients (patient video cases or PVCs) is a rapidly expanding field. The focus of this research has been either in the transfer of single pictures (such as in tele-dermatology [5]), communication between healthcare professionals and patients separated by large geographic distances [6] or specific radiological examinations such as echocardiograms [7]. The endpoint of these studies being a comparison between different clinicians or clinical outcomes of patients, with no examination of the effects of image quality. In 2005 McFaul [9] conducted a feasibility study to test whether real time video pictures used in a clinical environment

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