15 research outputs found
Education and assessment outline.
Group 1 and Group 2 had identical online review materials, follow-up reminders, and assessments after baseline education.</p
Demographic characteristics of Group 1 (in-person education) and Group 2 (e-module education) participants.
Demographic characteristics of Group 1 (in-person education) and Group 2 (e-module education) participants.</p
Question bank used for all assessments.
Forty questions were divided randomly into 4 separate assessments to be used as described at baseline and the 4, 8, and 12 month time points, so that no question was repeated between assessments. (DOCX)</p
Group 1 participant perspectives on accessibility factors relevant to in-person education.
Group 1 participant perspectives on accessibility factors relevant to in-person education.</p
Median test scores at baseline and after education/review at 4, 8, and 12 months.
Median test scores at baseline and after education/review at 4, 8, and 12 months.</p
Questionnaire on inclusivity in global research.
Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) is life-threatening without appropriate treatment. Though pediatric endocrinology care is limited in Rwanda, a decentralized health system allows access to local non-communicable disease (NCD) nurses through a network of 42 district hospitals. Recent rapid expansion of internet access in the country makes virtual diabetes education initiatives possible. We investigated whether Rwandan NCD nurses receiving diabetes education via online e-modules could make similar educational gains in insulin adjustment skills (IAS) compared to NCD nurses educated in a conference-style setting, and whether they would maintain equivalent competency at 1 year after education. We randomized 21 district hospitals and their NCD nurses to participate in a 1.5-day educational conference centered around care of type 1 diabetes (Group 1), while nurses from the remaining 21 hospitals (Group 2) received accommodation and access to equivalent educational materials in e-module form. Both groups were requested to review initial course materials at 4, 8, and 12 months. Ten-point IAS assessments were administered before and after education or review at each time point. Groups 1 and 2 had equal improvement after education (+2.0 vs. +2.0, p = 0.47) and equal final score at baseline (6.0 vs. 6.0, p = 0.74). However, both groups showed a diminishing improvement over time, so that any gains were lost by 4 months in Group 1 and 8 months in Group 2. Group 1 showed greater attrition in participation over time (19% vs 58% continued participation at one year, p = 0.002). Groups did not differ in subjective confidence in IAS after education. Both groups identified existing or potential access barriers to their respective educational method. While further modifications should be trialed to ensure equitable access and to maintain long-term engagement, online education is a feasible method to teach complex subspecialty skills to providers working in low-resource settings.</div
Median difference in test scores compared to pre-education baseline by group.
Median difference in test scores compared to pre-education baseline by group.</p
De-identified data underlying study results in compliance with PLoS data policy.
“Key” tab relates survey questions with the table identifier. (XLSX)</p
Participant perspectives of education efficacy by group.
Participant perspectives of education efficacy by group.</p
Summary of educational topics reviewed at the in-person conference.
Summary of educational topics reviewed at the in-person conference.</p