Korean Med Educ Rev.  2021 Oct;23(3):154-159. 10.17496/kmer.2021.23.3.154.

Challenges  and  Strategies  in  Medical  Education  in  the  COVID‐19  Pandemic

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Medical Education, Pusan National University School of Medicine, Busan, Korea

Abstract

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has profoundly impacted all aspects of undergraduate, postgraduate, and continuing medical education. Only the focus of medical education—care for patients and communities—has remained an integral part of all of the above sectors. Several challenges have been experienced by learners and educators as the education and training of future doctors has continued in the midst of this crisis, including the cancellation of face-to-face classes and training, reduced patient encounter opportunities, fairness issues in online assessments, disruption of patient interview-based exams, reflections on the role of doctors in society, and mental health-related problems linked to isolation and concerns about infection. In response to these disruptions, educators and institutions have rapidly deployed educational innovations. Schools have adopted educational strategies to overcome these challenges by implementing novel education delivery methods in an online format, providing clinical experiences through simulation or telehealth methods, introducing online assessment tools with formative purposes, encouraging learners’ involvement in nonclinical activities such as community service, and making available resources and programs to sustain learners’ mental health and wellness. During the COVID-19 pandemic, educators and institutions have faced drastic changes in medical education worldwide. At the same time, the quantitative expansion of online education has caused other problems, such as the lack of human collaboration. The long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on medical education need to be studied further.

Keyword

COVID-19; Medical education; Pandemics; Teaching
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