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Use of the Smartphone App WhatsApp as an E-Learning Method for Medical Residents: Multicenter Controlled Randomized Trial

机译:智能手机应用程序WhatsApp作为医疗居民电子学习方法的使用:多中心对照随机试验

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Background The WhatsApp smartphone app is the most widely used instant messaging app in the world. Recent studies reported the use of WhatsApp for educational purposes, but there is no prospective study comparing WhatsApp’s pedagogical effectiveness to that of any other teaching modality. Objective The main objective of this study was to measure the impact of a learning program via WhatsApp on clinical reasoning in medical residents. Methods This prospective, randomized, multicenter study was conducted among first- and second-year anesthesiology residents (offline recruitment) from four university hospitals in France. Residents were randomized in two groups of online teaching (WhatsApp and control). The WhatsApp group benefited from daily delivery of teaching documents on the WhatsApp app and a weekly clinical case supervised by a senior physician. In the control group, residents had access to the same documents via a traditional computer electronic learning (e-learning) platform. Medical reasoning was self-assessed online by a script concordance test (SCT; primary parameter), and medical knowledge was assessed using multiple-choice questions (MCQs). The residents also completed an online satisfaction questionnaire. Results In this study, 62 residents were randomized (32 to the WhatsApp group and 30 to the control group) and 22 residents in each group answered the online final evaluation. We found a difference between the WhatsApp and control groups for SCTs (60% [SD 9%] vs 68% [SD 11%]; P =.006) but no difference for MCQs (18/30 [SD 4] vs 16/30 [SD 4]; P =.22). Concerning satisfaction, there was a better global satisfaction rate in the WhatsApp group than in the control group (8/10 [interquartile range 8-9] vs 8/10 [interquartile range 8-8]; P =.049). Conclusions Compared to traditional e-learning, the use of WhatsApp for teaching residents was associated with worse clinical reasoning despite better global appreciation. The use of WhatsApp probably contributes to the dispersion of attention linked to the use of the smartphone. The impact of smartphones on clinical reasoning should be studied further.
机译:背景WhatsApp智能手机应用程序是世界上使用最广泛的即时消息传递应用程序。最近的研究报道了将WhatsApp用于教育目的,但尚无前瞻性研究将WhatsApp的教学效果与其他教学方式的效果进行比较。目的本研究的主要目的是衡量通过WhatsApp进行的学习计划对住院医师临床推理的影响。方法该前瞻性,随机,多中心研究是对法国四所大学医院的第一和第二年麻醉科住院医师(离线招募)进行的。居民被随机分为两组在线教学(WhatsApp和控件)。 WhatsApp小组受益于每日在WhatsApp应用程序上交付教学文件以及在高级医师的监督下每周进行的临床案例。在对照组中,居民可以通过传统的计算机电子学习(电子学习)平台访问相同的文档。医学推理是通过脚本一致性测试(SCT;主要参数)在线进行自我评估的,并使用多项选择题(MCQ)评估医学知识。居民还填写了在线满意度调查表。结果在这项研究中,有62位居民被随机分配(WhatsApp组为32位,对照组为30位),每组中有22位居民回答了在线最终评估。我们发现WhatsApp和对照组之间的SCT有差异(60%[SD 9%] vs 68%[SD 11%]; P = .006),而MCQ没有差异(18/30 [SD 4] vs 16 / 30 [SD 4]; P = .22)。关于满意度,WhatsApp组的总体满意度高于对照组(8/10 [四分位数范围8-9]与8/10 [四分位数范围8-8]; P = .049)。结论与传统的电子学习相比,尽管全球了解度更高,但使用WhatsApp进行居民教学却与更差的临床推理相关联。使用WhatsApp可能有助于分散与使用智能手机有关的注意力。智能手机对临床推理的影响应进一步研究。

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