4.3 Article

Utilizing Co-Creative Principles to Develop an E-Learning Platform for Interprofessional Training on Tinnitus: The Erasmus plus Project Tin-TRAC

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19148323

Keywords

tinnitus; interprofessional training; reusable learning objects; co-creation

Funding

  1. European Union [2021-1-CY01-KA220-VET-000025455]

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There is significant variation in tinnitus treatment, diagnosis, and management across Europe. The lack of national clinical guidelines and a common language among all involved disciplines has led to diversification in healthcare practices. The Tin-TRAC project aims to develop a common educational platform to unify tinnitus diagnosis and treatment strategies in Europe, thereby reducing practice diversification.
Tinnitus treatment, diagnosis and management across Europe varies significantly. The lack of national clinical guidelines for tinnitus management in most European countries and the absence of a common language across all disciplines involved is reflected in the diversification of healthcare practices. Interprofessional Training for Tinnitus Researchers and Clinicians (Tin-TRAC) is an Erasmus+ project that aims to develop common educational ground in the form of an e-Learning platform, co-created by patients, researchers and clinicians, which is able to unify tinnitus diagnosis and treatment strategies across Europe. A pan-European thematic educational platform integrating the best practices and latest research achievements with regard to tinnitus diagnosis and management has the potential to act as a facilitator of the reduction of interdisciplinary and interregional practice diversification. A detailed analysis of the educational needs of clinicians and researchers across disciplines will be followed by the co-creative development of the curriculum. Reusable learning objects will incorporate the training contents and will be integrated in an open e-Learning platform. Tin-TRAC envisions that its output will answer the need to create a common language across the clinicians and researchers of different disciplines that are involved in tinnitus management, and reduce patients' prolonged suffering, non-adherence and endless referral trajectories.

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