Abstract
Personal digital assistants (PDAs) were incorporated into the six-week Family Medicine Clerkship in 2002 to achieve two major goals: tracking students’ outpatient encounters at preceptor sites and providing opportunities to use PDAs during medical visits. Each student collects information on each patient seen. Data are then retrieved and presented to students individually and as a group twice during the rotation. Each PDA also contains several clinical resources that students use during both small group didactic sessions and real clinical encounters. These results are based on data collected from 85 students who completed the clerkship over the course of one year who recorded information on demographics, presenting problems, procedures, and type of precepting for a total of 11,146 patient encounters. The cumulative results have allowed clerkship faculty and administrators to set standard expectations of individual students and preceptors with respect to numbers of patients seen and type of precepting received. This PDA project is manageable in terms of costs as well as effort on the part of both students and faculty and has numerous benefits to the clerkship, one of which is the ability to provide real-time feedback to clerkship students and thus promote adult learning skills.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Julie Scott Taylor
JULIE SCOTT TAYLOR, MD, MSc, is Assistant Professor of Family Medicine, Director of Predoctoral Education, and the Clerkship Director for the six-week Family Medicine rotation at Brown Medical School.
David Anthony
DAVID ANTHONY, MD, MSc, is Assistant Professor of Family Medicine and the Assistant Director of Predoctoral Education at Brown Medical School.
Laura K. Lavallee
LAURA K. LAVALLEE is Education Coordinator and the former Family Medicine Clerkship Coordinator at Brown Medical School.
Nathaniel L. Taylor
NATHANIEL L. TAYLOR, PhD, is an independent technical consultant.