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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Feb 27, 2023
Date Accepted: Sep 23, 2023

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Exploring Current Practices, Needs, and Barriers for Expanding Distributed Medical Education and Scholarship in Psychiatry: Protocol for an Environmental Scan Using a Formal Information Search Approach and Explanatory Design

Hazelton L, Dias RdL, Esliger M, Tibbo P, Sinha N, Njoku A, Satyanarayana S, Siddhartha S, Alexiadis-Brown P, Rahman F, Maguire H, Gray G, Bosma M, Parker D, Connolly O, Raji A, Manning A, Bagnell A, Agyapong VIO

Exploring Current Practices, Needs, and Barriers for Expanding Distributed Medical Education and Scholarship in Psychiatry: Protocol for an Environmental Scan Using a Formal Information Search Approach and Explanatory Design

JMIR Res Protoc 2023;12:e46835

DOI: 10.2196/46835

PMID: 38010790

PMCID: 10714263

Exploring Current Practices, Needs, and Barriers for Expanding Distributed Medical Education and Scholarship in Psychiatry: A Protocol for an Environmental Scan Using a Formal Information Search Approach and Explanatory Design

  • Lara Hazelton; 
  • Raquel da Luz Dias; 
  • Mandy Esliger; 
  • Phil Tibbo; 
  • Nachiketa Sinha; 
  • Antony Njoku; 
  • Satyendra Satyanarayana; 
  • Sanjay Siddhartha; 
  • Peggy Alexiadis-Brown; 
  • Faisal Rahman; 
  • Hugh Maguire; 
  • Gerald Gray; 
  • Mark Bosma; 
  • Deborah Parker; 
  • Owen Connolly; 
  • Adewale Raji; 
  • Alexandra Manning; 
  • Alexa Bagnell; 
  • Vincent Israel Opoku Agyapong

ABSTRACT

Background:

Distributed medical education (DME) has numerous benefits for the medical profession, including expanded training capacity, enriched clinical experiences for learners, and improved recruitment of physicians to rural areas. The success of DME relies on a community of engaged faculty at distributed sites. Yet supporting, recognizing, and fully engaging with distributed faculty members can be challenging.

Objective:

This environmental scan aims to understand current practices and identify needs and barriers that must be addressed to facilitate the integration of psychiatrists from Dalhousie Faculty of Medicine’s distributed education sites in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick into the Department of Psychiatry.

Methods:

The study will use a mixed-methods approach, collecting quantitative data (demographics, participants' experience and interest in undergraduate, postgraduate, continuing medical education, research and scholarly activities, quality improvement, and knowledge translation) through an anonymous online survey and qualitative data (regarding topics in the quantitative survey) from focus group discussions and interviews.

Results:

Results are expected within six months of data collection and will inform policy options for expanding training opportunities and scholarly work at DME sites regionally.

Conclusions:

This research protocol may offer a valuable methodology for other psychiatry and medical departments wishing to expand their departments and extend their education programs beyond tertiary care centres. Clinical Trial: Not applicable. This is not a clinical trial.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Hazelton L, Dias RdL, Esliger M, Tibbo P, Sinha N, Njoku A, Satyanarayana S, Siddhartha S, Alexiadis-Brown P, Rahman F, Maguire H, Gray G, Bosma M, Parker D, Connolly O, Raji A, Manning A, Bagnell A, Agyapong VIO

Exploring Current Practices, Needs, and Barriers for Expanding Distributed Medical Education and Scholarship in Psychiatry: Protocol for an Environmental Scan Using a Formal Information Search Approach and Explanatory Design

JMIR Res Protoc 2023;12:e46835

DOI: 10.2196/46835

PMID: 38010790

PMCID: 10714263

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© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.