The impact of COVID-19 on Medical education and Medical Students. How and when can they return to placements?
Colin MacdougallPeter DangerfieldDavid KatzW David StrainPublished in: MedEdPublish (2016) (2020)
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. The defining feature of 2020 will be the early and mid-stages of the covid-19 pandemic, declared by the World Health Organisation on 11 th March. Rapid worldwide exponential spread continues and by 15 April, more than 1 900 000 cases and 123 000 deaths had been reported worldwide (WHO, 2020). Health services have coped to varying degrees. One common feature has been the withdrawal of routine care (Iacobucci, 2020a) and 'non-essential' staff including learners, although many have returned to undertake care roles. As the likely timeframe for stabilisation of health services becomes clearer, certainly in the United Kingdom (UK) (Iacobucci, 2020b), medical educators need to rapidly get the teaching of the next generation of health care workers back on track if they are to enter health services as confident and competent practitioners in 2020 and 2021. Although a 'whole world' experience, the effects of covid-19 sit in national contexts. We detail the issues for the UK in re-starting and re-inventing medical education, noting that the principles, if not necessarily the detail, will be common across the world.
Keyphrases
- medical education
- healthcare
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- quality improvement
- medical students
- palliative care
- machine learning
- deep learning
- cross sectional
- public health
- primary care
- mental health
- clinical practice
- affordable care act
- pain management
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- general practice
- health information
- neural network
- social media
- quantum dots