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anonymous

A Three-year Study of Lecture Multimedia Utilization in the Medical Curriculum: Associa... - 2 views

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    "In conclusion, a relatively small percentage of students use multimedia (audio and video) that are provided as a duplication of lectures in the basic sciences. The distribution of frequency of access of both video and audio files was consistent across the various courses offered in the first two years of medical school. There were significant correlations in the frequencies with which individual students viewed videos of lectures from course-to-course. Finally, there was a trend for an inverse association between the frequencies with which students viewed lectures and the grades they received in the course. This is an important observation that requires further investigation since it may be indicative of a maladaptive learning strategy for some students. It also does not exclude the possibility that additional computer-aided resources may be detrimental to some students. "
Dianne Rees

TwitterHub - 0 views

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    An interesting tool for visualizing health-related trends on Twitter
anonymous

For Teachers - Gapminder.org - 1 views

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    World trends tool
anonymous

YouTube - How to use Gapminder Desktop - 0 views

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    "Hans Rosling shows how to use Gapminder Desktop to present global trends."
anonymous

BioMedical Engineering OnLine | Full text | How smartphones are changing the face of mo... - 2 views

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    "his paper provides a brief state-of-the-art overview of health and healthcare smartphone apps (applications) on the market today, including emerging trends and market uptake."
anonymous

Trends in medical error education: are - PubMed Mobile - 0 views

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    "Although resident education about medical errors has improved since 2002, opportunities to model learning from mistakes are frequently missed."
anonymous

10 Common Misconceptions About The Flipped Classroom - 1 views

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    "Following are 10 of the most common erroneous ideas about flipped teaching and learning that you may come across, and a brief explanation of why each of them is misinformed."
anonymous

10 Pros And Cons Of A Flipped Classroom - 1 views

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    "Despite these issues, the flipped classroom can still a very effective, hands-on approach to improving student achievement and involving them in their own education."
anonymous

Transforming Practice - NEJM - 2 views

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    "By offloading tasks from the 15-minute visit in order to prioritize the patient's agenda, adding group, telephone, and electronic encounters, and reorganizing services with the aim of maximizing the health of a practice's entire patient population, innovative primary care practices could lead primary care out of crisis into an era of renewal."
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    This article seems to advocate the trend in UK based primary care- but key questions remain unanswered, can trust be transferred from the individual doctor to the team? Does this dilute the 'doctor as drug' benefit?
avivajazz  jazzaviva

AARP |:| Fixing US Healthcare - 0 views

  • The AARP just met with the leadership of the Mayo Clinic, one of the most outstanding medical institutions in the country. They provide excellent care at a cost that is less than most other parts of the healthcare system - and with improved outcomes. We asked them about their secret to success. Mayo has an electronic medical record and all their patients have their information online. The physicians are on salary, so there’s no incentive to order unnecessary tests or procedures, and Mayo has an ethic of patient-centered care, with a long history of attracting the best people and rewarding them. If Mayo can do it, why can’t everyone else? The AARP believes that the potential is there for most communities to have excellent care – we must emulate the care delivery of institutions like the Mayo Clinic, and put in place payment and information systems that will coordinate care management better. It’s a big job and will take some investment, but we have many opportunities to do a better job than we’re doing today.
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    The AARP just met with the leadership of the Mayo Clinic, one of the most outstanding medical institutions in the country. They provide excellent care at a cost that is less than most other parts of the healthcare system - and with improved outcomes. We asked them about their secret to success. Mayo has an electronic medical record and all their patients have their information online. The physicians are on salary, so there's no incentive to order unnecessary tests or procedures, and Mayo has an ethic of patient-centered care, with a long history of attracting the best people and rewarding them. If Mayo can do it, why can't everyone else? The AARP believes that the potential is there for most communities to have excellent care - we must emulate the care delivery of institutions like the Mayo Clinic, and put in place payment and information systems that will coordinate care management better. It's a big job and will take some investment, but we have many opportunities to do a better job than we're doing today.
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