Showing posts with label Grand Rounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grand Rounds. Show all posts

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Scholarship, Emerging Technology and Medical Education

Those who know me know my interest in emerging technology in medicine and medical education continues to flourish.  I am always looking for ways that technology can help drive medical education.  Specifically, social media has the capability of disseminating information to a much greater number of learners than in the past via traditional formats.  One such example is this great video by the AAMC on using wearable technologies in medical education, featuring Dr. Warren Wiechmann.

In discussing this within my academic environment, conversations almost always come back to scholarship, specifically, publishing in peer-reviewed journals.  Articles on the use of social media in medicine are sparse, but are beginning to crop up in mainstream medical journals.  Leaders such as Dr. Terry Kind are really demonstrating the impact via a scholarly approach.

It is with excitement that I read some recent articles (this and this) by some innovators in emergency medicine that can get physicians started using online resources and thinking about peer review with respect to blogs.  Simply put, these articles are phenomenal!  It is exciting to see that journal editors are beginning to see the impact of technology and social media for their readers.  

With this blog, I am excited to announce a new opportunity for me: as social media editor for the Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions (@JCEHP).  I thank JCEHP's senior editor, Curt Olson, for his vision to allow me to become involved in growing the journal's reach by utilizing social media, specifically twitter.  In the coming year, we will work on creating and disseminating information via a blog for readers to provide comments on articles of interest, and will push content out to those interested via online social networks.


There are great ways of using social media for the betterment of medicine and medical education.  One such way we have been utilizing at the Indiana University School of Medicine is to tweet our Pediatrics Grand Rounds (follow on Wednesday mornings, 8 am EST, at #iupedsgrrounds), which we've been doing for several years now.  But how do we show (in a peer-reviewed journal) the impact of this activity?  Many specialties have written about tweeting national conferences (including Oncology, Surgery, Nephrology and Urology, to name a few).  

So how can we demonstrate this impact in the JCEHP journal?  By including a presence within social media, we hope to start a conversation on how social media can provide an impact within medical education.  It's a start, but we have to start somewhere.  I'm excited to be a small part of this journey, both at my institution and at JCEHP.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Mobile Tablets in Clinical Medicine

I read this piece on perception of professionalism around use of mobile tablets in medicine this morning, and it struck a chord with me.  I am the first to admit that I have had both formal and informal discussions with medical students and residents about looking on smart phones or tablet in the middle of rounds.  I have discussed it in a variety of terms likely related to “this is not professional, and it appears to me as if you are disinterested.”  The traditional thinking is that the learner is bored and/or distracted, and either surfing the internet, checking email, playing a video game or doing some other activity besides listening intently on rounds.
However, this survey article on the use of mobile computing by trainees is quite intriguing.  40% of academic physicians and trainees said they owned a mobile tablet, and 50% of those, or 20% total, use them for clinical medicine at the point of care.  That is a lot, and I bet the number is growing daily.  Many residency programs have begun purchasing mobile tablets for their trainees specifically for the use in the clinical arena, either for the purposes of medical education, or direct patient care activities.  The University of Chicago Department of Medicine residency program even published outcomes on the impact of providing trainees with tablets.
So what should we do about the professionalism issue?  One thing I would suggest is calling out the “elephant in the room”.  Trainees could actually state up front to their faculty instructors that they use their tablets to look up information.  Second, faculty could embrace it, and have, for example, “tablet breaks”, where in the middle of rounds, for 5-10 minutes, everyone could stop, take a break, and look at their tablets for whatever they wanted (be it looking up information, checking email, or whatever they feel is important for themselves personally). [credit for this idea goes to my Executive Associate Dean for Education, Dr. Maryellen Gusic, who suggested it to me].  Third, faculty can lead by example.  Specifically, they could show trainees how to use tablets and collect and disseminate information from the use of mobile tablets at the point of care, without appearing completely engrossed in the tablet itself (provided they know how to do so themselves).  Literally, this would be done as a teaching point just like any other golden nugget of teaching.  We highlighted this example as a workshop at the APDIM Spring conference in April of 2012.
One example from my own personal learning is what I do every week.  When in attendance, I tweet Pediatrics Grand Rounds every Wednesday at 8 am EST, at the hashtag #IUPedsGrRounds.  I wonder what I look like to others in the room as I am typing furiously on the tablet keyboard to keep up with the speaker.  I can honestly say that I am totally listening to the speaker, trying to learn as much as possible, and also trying to get the information out there onto Twitter.  I could probably argue that I am more engaged in learning from the one-hour session than others in the room—but I see how it could appear to others that I am distracted, and doing something less than "scholarly-appearing".
Have you seen instances where trainees appear to have their faces buried in their tablets or smartphones, and how have you handled it?  What can we say to trainees to help them avoid the appearance of being unprofessional, especially when they may be doing the exact opposite: helping the team find information to optimize patient care?
As a way of highlighting the importance of this and other ways to integrate mobile tablets into the medical education arena, we are excited to host the inaugural Mobile Computing in Medical Education conference on Friday May 31, 2013, on the campus of the Indiana University School of Medicine.  Topics like this would be definitely welcome.  The call for proposals is still open—please submit if you are interested in attending, and disseminating your work to others!

Monday, August 20, 2012

Faculty Learning in Social Media

It has been a great last week for me.  I have successfully returned from vacation and have come out of “email jail” relatively unscathed.  I begin a short two-week stint on the inpatient medicine service in a few weeks, and am using this week to get caught up on some important activities soon to come.
First, I am excited to be giving a Grand Rounds presentation at Columbus Regional Hospital in Columbus, IN, in a few days on social media in medicine and medical education.  It has provided me with an opportunity to reflect on all of the information I have collected on the topic over the past year or so.  We will be live tweeting the event at the hashtag #CRHGrandRounds, at 12 noon EST on 8/22/12, and I look forward to the discussions both in person and online from that.
Second, I am pleased to report that we are rolling out a Faculty Learning Community (FLC) in Social Media for IUSM faculty members.  I had the privilege of belonging to a similar FLC in the use of iPads in medical education for the past two years, and it was widely successful.  With this new project in Social Media just starting, the hope is to learn from others, and move forward scholarship with regards to using social media within medicine and medical education.  We are starting it off with a presentation on how to use Twitter in medicine, followed by applications from faculty members who want to join this FLC, starting the actual group out in October.  I am extremely honored to be leading this FLC, and hope that we can determine some real areas for research around social media and follow through on that research in the coming year.  For example, how do we best teach students and trainees about using social media without compromising professionalism?  How can physician use of social media impact direct patient care in a positive manner?
For my fellow faculty at the IUSM: please send in an application if you are interested in how social media impacts your teaching and learning!  I am curious for those faculty out there at other institutions: have you done a similar thing to these learning communities, and what were your successes and failures?  What worked well and what didn’t work so well?  Please comment so others may learn from what you have accomplished.