Abstract
Bedside teaching is a mainstay of medical education. The development of clinical and practical skills, the use of patient centered care and the team approach cannot be underestimated, although bedside teaching has seen a decline over the recent period. This is possibly due to a combination of patient embarrassment, the pressure placed on doctors to maximize patient treatment time and shorten their stay in hospital, and the recognized effect on training by the European Working Time Directive.
Technology has strongly influenced the development of medicine over the ages, and since the introduction of mobile technology, it has advanced dramatically over the last two decades. The ease of access to a worldwide source of medical opinion has meant that education for both doctors and patients can be hand held and ever present, including at the bedside, with smartphones and tablet computers now an integral part of modern day life.
This review will focus on the potential role and ability of the app to modernise a traditional teaching method, both for the junior doctor and medical student and for the impact on patient education.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
General Materials Science
Reference63 articles.
1. Teaching, training, supporting and assessing, Available from: www.gmc-uk.org/guidance/good_medical_practice/teaching_training.asp
2. Crumlish CM, Yialamas MA, McMahon GT.
Quantification of bedside teaching by an academic hospitalist group.
J Hosp Med
2009;
4
(5)
: 304-7.
3. Majdan JF, Berg KT, Schultz KL, Schaeffer A, Berg D.
Patient perceptions of bedside teaching rounds.
Med Educ
2013;
47
(11)
: 1124-5.
4. Gonzalo JD, Heist BS, Duffy BL, et al.
The value of bedside rounds: a multicenter qualitative study.
Teach Learn Med
2013;
25
(4)
: 326-33.
5. Memory Alpha, Starfleet Tricorder, http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Starfleet_tricorder