Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration

Background: The widening gap between innovations in the medical field and the dissemination of such information to doctors may affect the quality of care. Offline computer-based digital education (OCDE) may be a potential solution to overcoming the geographical, financial, and temporal obstacles fac...

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Main Authors: Tudor Car, Lorainne, Wahabi, Hayfaa Abdelmageed, Esmaeil, Samia Ahmed, Bahkali, Khawater Hassan, Titi, Maher Abdelraheim, Amer, Yasser Sami, Fayed, Amel Ahmed, Jamal, Amr, Zakaria, Nasriah, Siddiqui, Amna Rehana, Semwal, Monika, Posadzki, Paul, Car, Josip
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87101
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49282
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-87101
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Systematic Review
Medical Education
Science::Medicine
spellingShingle Systematic Review
Medical Education
Science::Medicine
Tudor Car, Lorainne
Wahabi, Hayfaa Abdelmageed
Esmaeil, Samia Ahmed
Bahkali, Khawater Hassan
Titi, Maher Abdelraheim
Amer, Yasser Sami
Fayed, Amel Ahmed
Jamal, Amr
Zakaria, Nasriah
Siddiqui, Amna Rehana
Semwal, Monika
Posadzki, Paul
Car, Josip
Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
description Background: The widening gap between innovations in the medical field and the dissemination of such information to doctors may affect the quality of care. Offline computer-based digital education (OCDE) may be a potential solution to overcoming the geographical, financial, and temporal obstacles faced by doctors. Objective: The objectives of this systematic review were to evaluate the effectiveness of OCDE compared with face-to-face learning, no intervention, or other types of digital learning for improving medical doctors’ knowledge, cognitive skills, and patient-related outcomes. Secondary objectives were to assess the cost-effectiveness (CE) of OCDE and any adverse effects. Methods: We searched major bibliographic databases from 1990 to August 2017 to identify relevant articles and followed the Cochrane methodology for systematic reviews of intervention. Results: Overall, 27 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 1 cluster RCT (cRCT), and 1 quasi-RCT were included in this review. The total number of participants was 1690 in addition to the cRCT, which included 24 practices. Due to the heterogeneity of the participants, interventions, and outcomes, meta-analysis was not feasible, and the results were presented as narrative summary. Compared with face-to-face learning, the effect of OCDE on knowledge gain is uncertain (ratio of the means [RM] range 0.95-1.17; 8 studies, 495 participants; very low grade of evidence). From the same comparison, the effect of OCDE on cognitive skill gain is uncertain (RM range 0.1-0.9; 8 studies, 375 participants; very low grade of evidence). OCDE may have little or no effect on patients’ outcome compared with face-to-face education (2 studies, 62 participants; low grade of evidence). Compared with no intervention, OCDE may improve knowledge gain (RM range 1.36-0.98; 4 studies, 401 participants; low grade of evidence). From the same comparison, the effect of OCDE on cognitive skill gain is uncertain (RM range 1.1-1.15; 4 trials, 495 participants; very low grade of evidence). One cRCT, involving 24 practices, investigated patients’ outcome in this comparison and showed no difference between the 2 groups with low-grade evidence. Compared with text-based learning, the effect of OCDE on cognitive skills gain is uncertain (RM range 0.91-1.46; 3 trials with 4 interventions; 68 participants; very low-grade evidence). No study in this comparison investigated knowledge gain or patients’ outcomes. One study assessed the CE and showed that OCDE was cost-effective when compared with face-to-face learning if the cost is less than or equal to Can $200. No trial evaluated the adverse effect of OCDE. Conclusions: The effect of OCDE compared with other methods of education on medical doctors’ knowledge and cognitive skill gain is uncertain. OCDE may improve doctors’ knowledge compared with no intervention but its effect on doctors’ cognitive skills is uncertain. OCDE may have little or no effect in improving patients’ outcome.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Tudor Car, Lorainne
Wahabi, Hayfaa Abdelmageed
Esmaeil, Samia Ahmed
Bahkali, Khawater Hassan
Titi, Maher Abdelraheim
Amer, Yasser Sami
Fayed, Amel Ahmed
Jamal, Amr
Zakaria, Nasriah
Siddiqui, Amna Rehana
Semwal, Monika
Posadzki, Paul
Car, Josip
format Article
author Tudor Car, Lorainne
Wahabi, Hayfaa Abdelmageed
Esmaeil, Samia Ahmed
Bahkali, Khawater Hassan
Titi, Maher Abdelraheim
Amer, Yasser Sami
Fayed, Amel Ahmed
Jamal, Amr
Zakaria, Nasriah
Siddiqui, Amna Rehana
Semwal, Monika
Posadzki, Paul
Car, Josip
author_sort Tudor Car, Lorainne
title Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
title_short Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
title_full Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
title_fullStr Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
title_sort medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87101
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49282
_version_ 1683494033068916736
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-871012020-11-01T05:24:38Z Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration Tudor Car, Lorainne Wahabi, Hayfaa Abdelmageed Esmaeil, Samia Ahmed Bahkali, Khawater Hassan Titi, Maher Abdelraheim Amer, Yasser Sami Fayed, Amel Ahmed Jamal, Amr Zakaria, Nasriah Siddiqui, Amna Rehana Semwal, Monika Posadzki, Paul Car, Josip Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Centre for Population Health Sciences Family Medicine and Primary Care Systematic Review Medical Education Science::Medicine Background: The widening gap between innovations in the medical field and the dissemination of such information to doctors may affect the quality of care. Offline computer-based digital education (OCDE) may be a potential solution to overcoming the geographical, financial, and temporal obstacles faced by doctors. Objective: The objectives of this systematic review were to evaluate the effectiveness of OCDE compared with face-to-face learning, no intervention, or other types of digital learning for improving medical doctors’ knowledge, cognitive skills, and patient-related outcomes. Secondary objectives were to assess the cost-effectiveness (CE) of OCDE and any adverse effects. Methods: We searched major bibliographic databases from 1990 to August 2017 to identify relevant articles and followed the Cochrane methodology for systematic reviews of intervention. Results: Overall, 27 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 1 cluster RCT (cRCT), and 1 quasi-RCT were included in this review. The total number of participants was 1690 in addition to the cRCT, which included 24 practices. Due to the heterogeneity of the participants, interventions, and outcomes, meta-analysis was not feasible, and the results were presented as narrative summary. Compared with face-to-face learning, the effect of OCDE on knowledge gain is uncertain (ratio of the means [RM] range 0.95-1.17; 8 studies, 495 participants; very low grade of evidence). From the same comparison, the effect of OCDE on cognitive skill gain is uncertain (RM range 0.1-0.9; 8 studies, 375 participants; very low grade of evidence). OCDE may have little or no effect on patients’ outcome compared with face-to-face education (2 studies, 62 participants; low grade of evidence). Compared with no intervention, OCDE may improve knowledge gain (RM range 1.36-0.98; 4 studies, 401 participants; low grade of evidence). From the same comparison, the effect of OCDE on cognitive skill gain is uncertain (RM range 1.1-1.15; 4 trials, 495 participants; very low grade of evidence). One cRCT, involving 24 practices, investigated patients’ outcome in this comparison and showed no difference between the 2 groups with low-grade evidence. Compared with text-based learning, the effect of OCDE on cognitive skills gain is uncertain (RM range 0.91-1.46; 3 trials with 4 interventions; 68 participants; very low-grade evidence). No study in this comparison investigated knowledge gain or patients’ outcomes. One study assessed the CE and showed that OCDE was cost-effective when compared with face-to-face learning if the cost is less than or equal to Can $200. No trial evaluated the adverse effect of OCDE. Conclusions: The effect of OCDE compared with other methods of education on medical doctors’ knowledge and cognitive skill gain is uncertain. OCDE may improve doctors’ knowledge compared with no intervention but its effect on doctors’ cognitive skills is uncertain. OCDE may have little or no effect in improving patients’ outcome. Published version 2019-07-11T04:47:15Z 2019-12-06T16:35:11Z 2019-07-11T04:47:15Z 2019-12-06T16:35:11Z 2019 Journal Article Wahabi, H. A., Esmaeil, S. A., Bahkali, K. H., Titi, M. A., Amer, Y. S., Fayed, A. A., . . . Car, J. (2019). Medical doctors' offline computer-assisted digital education : systematic review by the digital health education collaboration. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 21(3), e12998-. doi:10.2196/12998 1439-4456 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87101 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49282 10.2196/12998 en Journal of Medical Internet Research © 2019 Hayfaa Abdelmageed Wahabi, Samia Ahmed Esmaeil, Khawater Hassan Bahkali, Maher Abdelraheim Titi, Yasser Sami Amer, Amel Ahmed Fayed, Amr Jamal, Nasriah Zakaria, Amna Rehana Siddiqui, Monika Semwal, Lorainne Tudor Car, Paul Posadzki, Josip Car. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 01.03.2019. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included. 14 p. application/pdf