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Related Experiment Videos

Computer-assisted learning and evaluation in medicine.

T E Piemme1

  • 1Office of Continuing Medical Education, George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC 20037.

JAMA
|July 15, 1988
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Computer-assisted instruction (CAI) in medical education offers flexible learning but faces slow adoption. Future applications promise to revolutionize competence assessment and enhance patient care delivery.

Area of Science:

  • Medical Education Technology
  • Digital Health
  • Health Informatics

Background:

  • Computer use in medical education has evolved since the 1960s.
  • Widespread adoption has lagged behind the potential of computer-assisted instruction (CAI).

Observation:

  • CAI allows students control over learning content, time, place, and pace.
  • Information delivery methods vary, suiting different educational levels (undergraduate, graduate, continuing).

Findings:

  • CAI enhances the learning process for medical students.
  • Computers can transform competence assessment in certification and licensure within a decade.

Implications:

  • The greatest potential of CAI lies in providing real-time information at the point of patient care.

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  • Advancements in data storage and retrieval are rapidly expanding CAI's future applications in healthcare.