4.5 Article

Perception of Neurosurgery Residents and Attendings on Online Webinars During COVID-19 Pandemic and Implications on Future Education

Journal

WORLD NEUROSURGERY
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages E811-E816

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2020.11.015

Keywords

COVID-19; Neurosurgery; Neurosurgical residents; Online teaching; Postgraduate medical education; Survey; Webinars

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This study evaluated the perceptions of online webinars in neurosurgery education among trainees and attending physicians. While overall satisfaction rates were similar, attendings were less comfortable with online webinars and found them less useful compared to residents.
BACKGROUND: Online education has provided an important tool to continue medical education during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our study aimed to evaluate trainee and attending perceptions of online webinars as an educational tool in neurosurgery. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional survey study. A web-based 19-question survey was distributed to the people who attended the webinar series that was carried out by the Saudi Association of Neurological Surgery from March 29, 2020 to May 31, 2020. Candidates were identified through their registration e-mails. The survey was distributed June 5-8, 2020. RESULTS: A total of 156 responses were received (survey response rate: 60%). The overall satisfaction rate among residents and attendings (board-certified neuro-surgeons) was similar (>80%). However, only 56.4% of attendings reported they were comfortable with online webinars compared with 81.2% of residents (P value <0.0001). Seventy-five percent of residents found online lectures more useful than traditional in-person lectures compared with 52% of attendings (P value = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Online educational webinars provide an educational value that can be considered as an adjunct to traditional (in-person) education methods. Among trainees, the satisfaction of neurosurgery webinars was encouraging to consider as an education method. More objective research and progress are required to adopt and refine existing online didactic and neurosurgical teaching tools while creating more engaging future distant learning models.

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