Publication date: Oct 11, 2024
There are currently many online resources for medical education during residency and beyond in anesthesiology, intensive care, pain, emergency and palliative medicine. From traditional textbooks and in-person events to learning platforms, apps, podcasts, simulation training and even virtual reality, there are many ways to supplement traditional residency curricula and continuing medical education. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has been instrumental in making medical education content more accessible and, among other things, accelerate the transfer of knowledge. To include all colleagues in the goal of life-long learning using these modern tools, we recommend the development of a digital media concept that is individually tailored to each department of anesthesiology. First, the goals of the department should be defined, e. g., can existing teaching materials be made more digitally accessible for asynchronous learning? Then, department resources should be compiled, e. g., what learning platforms are already being used and if and how social media should play a role? One or more persons should be named responsible and maintain the new concept. In this context, it is essential to develop quality criteria to properly assess the digital content. With the support of the department, conventional teaching methods can be combined with new digital possibilities in residency education and beyond. In this way, individual shift models, various levels of participation in live teaching events and different types of learners can be taken into account. These diverse digital tools can enrich the training and further education of every team member in an anesthesiology department and will accompany us well into the future.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Coronavirus | Asynchronous learning |
Live | Digital learning |
Medicine | Education |
Podcasts | FOAM |
Textbooks | FOAMed |
Lifelong learning |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | emergency |
disease | MESH | coronavirus disease 2019 |
disease | IDO | quality |