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Remote Learning in Psychiatry Residency Programs During COVID-19: Emergency Measure or Path for the Future?

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The COVID-19 pandemic led to an unparalleled shift to remote didactics teaching within psychiatry residency programs. Though the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) requires that psychiatry residencies protect… Click to show full abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic led to an unparalleled shift to remote didactics teaching within psychiatry residency programs. Though the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) requires that psychiatry residencies protect didactics time [1], the format of the teaching is determined by individual programs. In-person didactics have traditionally been a part of the residency training experience, providing an opportunity to establish cohesiveness among residents and to get to know faculty. However, COVID-19 social distancing protocols forced many residency programs to rapidly shift to online learning. Remote teaching triggered by a crisis is different from intentional online education. The latter is based on careful instructional design and employs a systematic approach to curriculum development and delivery. Typical planning and development takes 6–9 months [2]. Online curricula improve by the second or third iteration and are based on years of didactic theory and standards [2]. Intentional online education contrasts with what residency program directors recently were required to do: develop or adapt an online didactic curriculum, essentially overnight. Due to time limitations, many programs simply delivered their in-person curriculum remotely, thus contending with a number of obstacles, including content that does not lend itself to online delivery and faculty members who were not adequately prepared for this new teaching modality. Little is known about the impact of this change. We set out to evaluate the shift to online learning in psychiatry residency programs during the COVID-19 pandemic. We were interested in understanding the landscape pre-pandemic, how it changed with online teaching, and how these changes were received by program directors. We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between July and November 2020. All psychiatry program directors (n = 245) listed on Fellowship and Residency Electronic Interactive Database Access (FREIDA) in 2020 were invited to participate. The survey contained multiple choice and open-ended questions. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed. Responses to open-ended questions were subjected to thematic analysis using principles of Consensual Qualitative Research [3]. Of the 245 psychiatry program directors contacted, 54 (22%) completed the survey. Prior to the pandemic, 82% (n = 44) of responders reported their didactics were entirely in-person, 11% (n = 6) reported in-person programming with some online teaching, and 7% (n = 4) reported in-person programming with over half of the curriculum online. Post-pandemic, 98% (n = 53) of responders reported using real-time online didactics. Thirteen percent (n = 7) of programs utilized online content from another organization/ institution; 33% (n = 18) utilized self-directed study and 17% (n = 9) utilized online pre-recorded lectures supplementary to real-time online lectures. The most frequently identified difficulties in adopting remote teaching were unfamiliarity with technology (72%; n = 39) and discomfort with teaching learners virtually (69%; n = 37). Zoom was the most common platform (89%; n = 48), followed by WebEx (37%; n = 20), Skype (15%; n = 8), Microsoft Teams (9%; n = 5), BlueJeans (7%; n = 4), and Google (7%; n = 4). The majority of responders (83%; n = 45) indicated their intention to modify pre-pandemic didactics once safe to reconvene in-person. When given the opportunity to comment, program directors described numerous benefits to online learning, including ease and convenience in time and location, better attendance, and the ability to secure speakers who may not have * Stacey Kaltman [email protected]

Keywords: psychiatry; person; online; psychiatry residency; residency programs; residency

Journal Title: Academic Psychiatry
Year Published: 2021

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