COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)

Bibliographic Details
Format: Restricted Document
_version_ 1860796882249318400
building INTELEK Repository
collection Online Access
collectionurl https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072
date 2024-10-02 15:08
eventvenue Online Conference
format Restricted Document
id 10542
institution UniSZA
originalfilename 4577-01-FH03-FP-21-52969.png
recordtype oai_dc
resourceurl https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=10542
spelling 10542 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=10542 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072 Restricted Document Conference Conference Paper Deflate/Inflate image/png 786 1409 2024-10-02 15:08 1409x786 4577-01-FH03-FP-21-52969.png UniSZA Private Access COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU) Background: The unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic changed the educational landscape from conventional method to remote learning. Conventional face-to-face teaching and training was challenging due to social distancing measures, the lack of available trainers, and lack of time for observation due to demand of urgency during the procedures. Movement control order have made teaching and learning activities in the hospital suspended. Methods: We at the Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin, Kuala Terengganu, Malaysia, have developed the COVID-19 Remote Education for Medical Students in Intensive Care Unit (CORES-ICU; the abbreviation from COVID-19, Remote, Education, Students, and ICU) in the response to the pandemic. We organized remote teaching activities focused on the fundamentals of Intensive Care. We used remote learning with recorded lecturers, interactive case based discussion, seminar and quizzes uploaded into the learning management system. A continuous quality improvement was assessed at the end of the rotation. A feedback form with quantitative and qualitative questionnaires were used to evaluate effectiveness and to improve the contents. Results: 120 students completed the CORES-ICU. 90% of the respondents rates the course as very useful. 86% rated the online platform as excellent, despite of nearly 50% of the students still prefer physical and face-to-face teaching and learning activities. The advantages; students can participate anywhere, able to revise anytime and no need for social distancing. Among disadvantages; difficult to teach practical skills and confidentially concerns with recognizable case details for case based discussions. Qualitative data showed that the CORES-ICU was pitched at the appropriate level, accessible and build medical students confidence to do rotation in the ICU. Conclusion: This model of educational delivery was an effective solutions under social distancing measures. We believe the remote education provides continuing education during the pandemic crisis. 41st KSCCM Annual Congress ยท Acute and Critical Care Conference 2021 & 21st Joint Scientific Congress of the KSCCM and JSICM Online Conference
spellingShingle COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)
summary Background: The unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic changed the educational landscape from conventional method to remote learning. Conventional face-to-face teaching and training was challenging due to social distancing measures, the lack of available trainers, and lack of time for observation due to demand of urgency during the procedures. Movement control order have made teaching and learning activities in the hospital suspended. Methods: We at the Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin, Kuala Terengganu, Malaysia, have developed the COVID-19 Remote Education for Medical Students in Intensive Care Unit (CORES-ICU; the abbreviation from COVID-19, Remote, Education, Students, and ICU) in the response to the pandemic. We organized remote teaching activities focused on the fundamentals of Intensive Care. We used remote learning with recorded lecturers, interactive case based discussion, seminar and quizzes uploaded into the learning management system. A continuous quality improvement was assessed at the end of the rotation. A feedback form with quantitative and qualitative questionnaires were used to evaluate effectiveness and to improve the contents. Results: 120 students completed the CORES-ICU. 90% of the respondents rates the course as very useful. 86% rated the online platform as excellent, despite of nearly 50% of the students still prefer physical and face-to-face teaching and learning activities. The advantages; students can participate anywhere, able to revise anytime and no need for social distancing. Among disadvantages; difficult to teach practical skills and confidentially concerns with recognizable case details for case based discussions. Qualitative data showed that the CORES-ICU was pitched at the appropriate level, accessible and build medical students confidence to do rotation in the ICU. Conclusion: This model of educational delivery was an effective solutions under social distancing measures. We believe the remote education provides continuing education during the pandemic crisis.
title COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)
title_full COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)
title_fullStr COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)
title_short COVID-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (CORES-ICU)
title_sort covid-19 remote education for medical students in intensive care (cores-icu)