Third- and fourth-year medical students from Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar (WCM-Q) participated in the second iteration of an in-demand elective on telehealth, further demonstrating the growing importance of remote technology-driven patient care.
Titled “Telehealth and Tele Simulation Clinical Elective,” the two-week online elective was held in collaboration with the Weill Cornell Medicine Centre for Virtual Care (CVC) in New York.
The course was designed to encourage medical students to learn about and practice conducting remote interprofessional simulated patient evaluations with the aid of diverse technologies, emphasising the impact of telehealth, telemedicine, and technologies on provider-to-provider and provider-to-patient communication and interpersonal skills.
The elective enables students to describe and differentiate between telehealth and telemedicine; define and apply principles of interprofessional education and collaborative practice; understand and assess the benefits and suitability of using augmented and mixed reality as emergent technologies; conduct virtual video patient encounters and interprofessional patient evaluations; view examples of strategies used by telemedicine practitioners to evaluate and provide patient care; and become familiar with the development of and challenges faced by different countries in delivering patient care through telehealth/telemedicine.
In addition, students learned about the importance of lighting, screen movement, and presentation skills when conducting patient encounters, along with other logistical, ethical, and legal considerations.
The course was sponsored by Dr Stella Major, associate professor of family medicine in clinical medicine and director of the Clinical Skills and Simulation Lab at WCM-Q.
Guest faculty included Sweden-based Joseph Yang, digital educator and instructional designer; and from the CVC, Dr Kristie Busch, assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine; Dr Peter Greenwald, assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine, vice chair of clinical strategy and innovation, and director of telemedicine in the WCM Department of Emergency Medicine; Denzil Coleman, administrative director; and Dr Neel Naik, director of emergency medicine simulation education and assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine in the Department of Emergency Medicine.
Dr Major said: “The Covid-19 pandemic has taught us to be more mindful of how we spend our time and to explore more effective ways of delivering and ensuring healthcare continuity. I believe that the way forward is hybrid patient care. With this in mind, technology is now more central to our practice than ever before, and telehealth is increasingly becoming an important part of our future medical profession. Telehealth is a tool our medical students will need to become familiar with—it will be as critical as teaching our students how to use the stethoscope.”
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