Archibald D, Macdonald CJ, Plante J, houge RJ, Fiallos J. Residents' and preceptors' perceptions of the use of the iPad for clinical teaching in a family medicine residency program. BMC Medical Education 2014, 14:174 doi:10.1186/1472-6920-14-174
Background: As Family Medicine programs across
Canada are transitioning into a competency-based curriculum, medical students
and clinical teachers are increasingly incorporating tablet computers in their
work and educational activities. The purpose of this pilot study was to
identify how preceptors and residents use tablet computers to implement and
adopt a new family medicine curriculum and to evaluate how they access
applications (apps) through their tablet in an effort to support and enhance
effective teaching and learning.
Methods: Residents and preceptors (n = 25) from the
Family Medicine program working at the Pembroke Regional Hospital in Ontario,
Canada, were given iPads and training on how to use the device in clinical
teaching and learning activities and how to access the online curriculum. Data
regarding the use and perceived contribution of the iPads were collected
through surveys and focus groups. This mixed methods research used analysis of
survey responses to support the selection of questions for focus groups.
Results: Reported results were categorized into:
curriculum and assessment; ease of use; portability; apps and resources; and
perceptions about the use of the iPad in teaching/learning setting. Most
participants agreed on the importance of accessing curriculum resources through
the iPad but recognized that these required enhancements to facilitate use. The
iPad was considered to be more useful for activities involving output of
information than for input. Participants' responses regarding the ease of use
of mobile technology were heterogeneous due to the diversity of computer
proficiency across users. Residents had a slightly more favorable opinion
regarding the iPad's contribution to teaching/learning compared to preceptors.
Conclusions: iPad's interface should be fully
enhanced to allow easy access to online curriculum and its built-in resources.
The differences in computer proficiency level among users should be reduced by
sharing knowledge through workshops led by more skillful iPad users. To
facilitate collection of information through the iPad, the design of electronic
data-input forms should consider the participants' reported negative
perceptions towards typing data through mobile devices. Technology deployment
projects should gather sufficient evidence from pilot studies in order to guide
efforts to adapt resources and infrastructure to relevant needs of Family
Medicine teachers and learners.
Willison DJ, Ondrusek N, Dawson A, Emerson C, Ferris
LE, Saginur RI, Sampson H, Upshur R. What makes public health studies ethical?
Dissolving the boundary between research and practice. BMC Medical Ethics 2014,
15:61 doi:10.1186/1472-6939-15-61
ABSTRACT
Background: The generation of evidence is integral
to the work of public health and health service providers. Traditionally,
ethics has been addressed differently in research projects, compared with other
forms of evidence generation, such as quality improvement, program evaluation,
and surveillance, with review of non-research activities falling outside the
purview of the research ethics board. However, the boundaries between research
and these other evaluative activities are not distinct. Efforts to delineate a
boundary – whether on grounds of primary purpose, temporality, underlying legal
authority, departure from usual practice, or direct benefits to participants –
have been unsatisfactory.
Public Health Ontario has eschewed this distinction
between research and other evaluative activities, choosing to adopt a common
framework and process to guide ethical reflection on all public health
evaluative projects throughout their lifecycle – from initial planning through
to knowledge exchange.
Discussion: The Public Health Ontario framework was
developed by a working group of public health and ethics professionals and
scholars, in consultation with individuals representing a wide range of public
health roles. The first part of the framework interprets the existing Canadian
research ethics policy statement (commonly known as the TCPS 2) through a
public health lens. The second part consists of ten questions that guide the
investigator in the application of the core ethical principles to public health
initiatives.
The framework is intended for use by those designing
and executing public health evaluations, as well as those charged with ethics
review of projects. The goal is to move toward a culture of ethical integrity
among investigators, reviewers and decision-makers, rather than mere compliance
with rules. The framework is consonant with the perspective of the learning
organization and is generalizable to other public health organizations, to
health services organizations, and beyond.
Summary: Public Health Ontario has developed an
ethics framework that is applicable to any evidence-generating activity,
regardless of whether it is labelled research. While developed in a public
health context, it is readily adaptable to other health services organizations
and beyond.
Van der Worp MP, de Wijer A, Staal JB, MWG Nijhuis-
van der Sanden. Reproducibility of and
sex differences in common orthopaedic ankle and foot tests in runners. BMC
Musculoskeletal Disorders 2014, 15:171 doi:10.1186/1471-2474-15-171
ABSTRACT
Background: For future etiologic cohort studies in
runners it is important to identify whether (hyper)pronation of the foot,
decreased ankle joint dorsiflexion (AJD) and the degree of the extension of the
first Metatarsophalangeal joint (MTP1) are risk factors for running injuries
and to determine possible sex differences.
These parameters are frequently determined with the
navicular drop test (NDT) Stance and Single Limb-Stance, the Ankle Joint
Dorsiflexion-test, and the extension MTP1-test in a healthy population. The aim
of this clinimetric study was to determine the reproducibility of these three
orthopaedic tests in runners, using minimal equipment in order to make them
applicable in large cohort studies. Furthermore, we aimed to determine possible
sex differences of these tests.
Methods: The three orthopaedic tests were
administered by two sports physiotherapists in a group of 42 (22 male and 20
female) recreational runners. The intra-class correlation (ICC) for interrater
and intrarater reliability and the standard error of measurement (SEM) were
calculated. Bland and Altman plots were used to determine the 95% limits of
agreements (LOAs). Furthermore, the difference between female and male runners
was determined.
Results: The ICC’s of the NDT were in the range of
0.37 to 0.45, with a SEM in the range of 2.5 to 5 mm. The AJD-test had an
ICC of 0.88 and 0.86 (SEM 2.4° and 8.7°), with a 95% LOA of -6.0° to 6.3° and
-5.3° to 7.9°, and the MTP1-test had an ICC of 0.42 and 0.62 (SEM 34.4° and
9.9°), with a 95% LOA of -30.9° to 20.7° and -20° to 17.8° for the interrater
and intrarater reproducibility, respectively.
Females had a significantly (p < 0.05) lower
navicular drop score and higher range of motion in extension of the MTP1, but
no sex differences were found for ankle dorsiflexion (p ≥ 0.05).
Conclusion: The reproducibility for the AJD test in
runners is good, whereas that of the NDT and extension MTP1 was moderate or
low. We found a difference in NDT and MTP1 mobility between female and male
runners, however this needs to be established in a larger study with more
reliable test procedures.
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