Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction
Background: The world is short of 7.2 million health–care workers and this figure is growing. The shortage of teachers is even greater, which limits traditional education modes. eLearning may help overcome this training need. Offline eLearning is useful in remote and resource–limited settings with p...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-851792020-11-01T05:32:24Z Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction Wark, Petra A. Rasmussen, Kristine Belisario, José Marcano Molina, Joseph Antonio Loong, Stewart Lee Cotic, Ziva Papachristou, Nikos Riboli–Sasco, Eva Car, Lorainne Tudor Musulanov, Eve Marie Zhang, Yanfeng Kunz, Holger George, Pradeep Paul Heng, Bee Hoon Wheeler, Erica Lynette Al Shorbaji, Najeeb Svab, Igor Atun, Rifat Majeed, Azeem Car, Josip Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Library and information science::Knowledge management Knowledge ELearning Background: The world is short of 7.2 million health–care workers and this figure is growing. The shortage of teachers is even greater, which limits traditional education modes. eLearning may help overcome this training need. Offline eLearning is useful in remote and resource–limited settings with poor internet access. To inform investments in offline eLearning, we need to establish its effectiveness in terms of gaining knowledge and skills, students’ satisfaction and attitudes towards eLearning. Methods: We conducted a systematic review of offline eLearning for students enrolled in undergraduate, health–related university degrees. We included randomised controlled trials that compared offline eLearning to traditional learning or an alternative eLearning method. We searched the major bibliographic databases in August 2013 to identify articles that focused primarily on students’ knowledge, skills, satisfaction and attitudes toward eLearning, and health economic information and adverse effects as secondary outcomes. We also searched reference lists of relevant studies. Two reviewers independently extracted data from the included studies. We synthesized the findings using a thematic summary approach. Findings: Forty–nine studies, including 4955 students enrolled in undergraduate medical, dentistry, nursing, psychology, or physical therapy studies, met the inclusion criteria. Eleven of the 33 studies testing knowledge gains found significantly higher gains in the eLearning intervention groups compared to traditional learning, whereas 21 did not detect significant differences or found mixed results. One study did not test for differences. Eight studies detected significantly higher skill gains in the eLearning intervention groups, whilst the other 5 testing skill gains did not detect differences between groups. No study found offline eLearning as inferior. Generally no differences in attitudes or preference of eLearning over traditional learning were observed. No clear trends were found in the comparison of different modes of eLearning. Most of the studies were small and subject to several biases. Conclusions: Our results suggest that offline eLearning is equivalent and possibly superior to traditional learning regarding knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction. Although a robust conclusion cannot be drawn due to variable quality of the evidence, these results justify further investment into offline eLearning to address the global health care workforce shortage. Published version 2019-08-27T09:25:51Z 2019-12-06T15:58:50Z 2019-08-27T09:25:51Z 2019-12-06T15:58:50Z 2014 Journal Article Rasmussen, K., Belisario, J. M., Wark, P. A., Molina, J. A., Loong, S. L., Cotic, Z., . . . Car, J. (2014). Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction. Journal of Global Health, 4(1), 010405-. doi:10.7189/jogh.04.010405 2047-2978 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/85179 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49798 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4073241/ en Journal of Global Health © 2014 Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 18 p. application/pdf |
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Library and information science::Knowledge management Knowledge ELearning Wark, Petra A. Rasmussen, Kristine Belisario, José Marcano Molina, Joseph Antonio Loong, Stewart Lee Cotic, Ziva Papachristou, Nikos Riboli–Sasco, Eva Car, Lorainne Tudor Musulanov, Eve Marie Zhang, Yanfeng Kunz, Holger George, Pradeep Paul Heng, Bee Hoon Wheeler, Erica Lynette Al Shorbaji, Najeeb Svab, Igor Atun, Rifat Majeed, Azeem Car, Josip Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
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Background: The world is short of 7.2 million health–care workers and this figure is growing. The shortage of teachers is even greater, which limits traditional education modes. eLearning may help overcome this training need. Offline eLearning is useful in remote and resource–limited settings with poor internet access. To inform investments in offline eLearning, we need to establish its effectiveness in terms of gaining knowledge and skills, students’ satisfaction and attitudes towards eLearning. Methods: We conducted a systematic review of offline eLearning for students enrolled in undergraduate, health–related university degrees. We included randomised controlled trials that compared offline eLearning to traditional learning or an alternative eLearning method. We searched the major bibliographic databases in August 2013 to identify articles that focused primarily on students’ knowledge, skills, satisfaction and attitudes toward eLearning, and health economic information and adverse effects as secondary outcomes. We also searched reference lists of relevant studies. Two reviewers independently extracted data from the included studies. We synthesized the findings using a thematic summary approach. Findings: Forty–nine studies, including 4955 students enrolled in undergraduate medical, dentistry, nursing, psychology, or physical therapy studies, met the inclusion criteria. Eleven of the 33 studies testing knowledge gains found significantly higher gains in the eLearning intervention groups compared to traditional learning, whereas 21 did not detect significant differences or found mixed results. One study did not test for differences. Eight studies detected significantly higher skill gains in the eLearning intervention groups, whilst the other 5 testing skill gains did not detect differences between groups. No study found offline eLearning as inferior. Generally no differences in attitudes or preference of eLearning over traditional learning were observed. No clear trends were found in the comparison of different modes of eLearning. Most of the studies were small and subject to several biases. Conclusions: Our results suggest that offline eLearning is equivalent and possibly superior to traditional learning regarding knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction. Although a robust conclusion cannot be drawn due to variable quality of the evidence, these results justify further investment into offline eLearning to address the global health care workforce shortage. |
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Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) |
author_facet |
Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Wark, Petra A. Rasmussen, Kristine Belisario, José Marcano Molina, Joseph Antonio Loong, Stewart Lee Cotic, Ziva Papachristou, Nikos Riboli–Sasco, Eva Car, Lorainne Tudor Musulanov, Eve Marie Zhang, Yanfeng Kunz, Holger George, Pradeep Paul Heng, Bee Hoon Wheeler, Erica Lynette Al Shorbaji, Najeeb Svab, Igor Atun, Rifat Majeed, Azeem Car, Josip |
format |
Article |
author |
Wark, Petra A. Rasmussen, Kristine Belisario, José Marcano Molina, Joseph Antonio Loong, Stewart Lee Cotic, Ziva Papachristou, Nikos Riboli–Sasco, Eva Car, Lorainne Tudor Musulanov, Eve Marie Zhang, Yanfeng Kunz, Holger George, Pradeep Paul Heng, Bee Hoon Wheeler, Erica Lynette Al Shorbaji, Najeeb Svab, Igor Atun, Rifat Majeed, Azeem Car, Josip |
author_sort |
Wark, Petra A. |
title |
Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
title_short |
Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
title_full |
Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
title_fullStr |
Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
title_full_unstemmed |
Offline eLearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
title_sort |
offline elearning for undergraduates in health professions : a systematic review of the impact on knowledge, skills, attitudes and satisfaction |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/85179 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49798 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4073241/ |
_version_ |
1683494629394087936 |