» Articles » PMID: 34323861

Preparing Future Doctors for Telemedicine: An Asynchronous Curriculum for Medical Students Implemented During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Overview
Journal Acad Med
Specialty Medical Education
Date 2021 Jul 29
PMID 34323861
Citations 15
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Problem: The COVID-19 pandemic led to changes in both the clinical environment and medical education. The abrupt shift to telemedicine in March 2020, coupled with the recommendation that medical students pause in-person clinical rotations, highlighted the need for student training in telemedicine.

Approach: To maintain students' ability to participate in clinical encounters and continue learning in the new virtual environment, a telemedicine curriculum for clinical students was rapidly developed at Harvard Medical School (HMS) focusing on the knowledge and skills needed to conduct live video encounters. Curriculum leads created an interactive, flexible curriculum to teach students clinical skills, regulatory issues, professionalism, and innovations in telemedicine. This 5-module curriculum was delivered using various primarily asynchronous modalities including webinar-style presentations, prerecorded videos of physical exams from different disciplines, shadowing a synchronous telemedicine visit, peer discussions in small groups, and quizzes with both multiple-choice and open-ended questions.

Outcomes: During May 2020, 252 clerkship and postclerkship medical students at HMS completed the telemedicine curriculum. All students completed a precourse survey and 216 (85.7%) completed the postcourse survey. Students' self-rated knowledge of telemedicine increased, on average, from 38 (15.1%) reporting being fairly/very knowledgeable over 4 domains before the course to 182 (84.3%) afterward (P < .001). The course was highly rated, with 176/205 (85.9%) students reporting that it met their learning needs and 167/205 (81.5%) finding the delivery methods to be effective. Of 101 (45.3%) students who answered an open-ended postcourse survey question, 91 (90.1%) reported asynchronous learning to be a positive experience.

Next Steps: As telemedicine becomes increasingly and likely permanently integrated into the health care system, providing medical students with robust training in conducting care virtually will be essential. This curriculum provides a promising and feasible framework upon which other schools can apply these emerging competencies to design their own telemedicine curricula.

Citing Articles

Enhancing Professionalism Online (Netiquette) in Medical Schools: A Systematic Scoping Review.

Ng D, Liang J, Wong R, Raveendran V, Phua G, Fong W J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2025; 12:23821205241255268.

PMID: 40008119 PMC: 11851755. DOI: 10.1177/23821205241255268.


Creation of a Multimodal Telemedicine Curriculum for Preclinical Medical Students.

Costich M, Picoraro J, Scott T, Barron B, Feldman E, Friedman S MedEdPORTAL. 2025; 21:11483.

PMID: 39759770 PMC: 11697751. DOI: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11483.


How to design effective educational videos for teaching evidence-based medicine to undergraduate learners - systematic review with complementing qualitative research to develop a practicable guide.

Niekrenz L, Spreckelsen C Med Educ Online. 2024; 29(1):2339569.

PMID: 38615337 PMC: 11017999. DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2024.2339569.


Ten Years of Experience With a Telemedicine Platform Dedicated to Health Care Personnel: Implementation Report.

Azzolini C, Premi E, Donati S, Falco A, Torreggiani A, Sicurello F JMIR Med Inform. 2024; 12:e42847.

PMID: 38277199 PMC: 10858419. DOI: 10.2196/42847.


Training future clinicians in telehealth competencies: outcomes of a telehealth curriculum and teleOSCEs at an academic medical center.

Bajra R, Srinivasan M, Torres E, Rydel T, Schillinger E Front Med (Lausanne). 2023; 10:1222181.

PMID: 37849494 PMC: 10577422. DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2023.1222181.