E-Learning for Medical Education in Sub-Saharan Africa and Low-Resource Settings: Viewpoint
- PMID: 30626565
- PMCID: PMC6329426
- DOI: 10.2196/12449
E-Learning for Medical Education in Sub-Saharan Africa and Low-Resource Settings: Viewpoint
Abstract
E-learning has been heralded as a revolutionary force for medical education, especially for low-resource countries still suffering from a dire lack of health care workers. However, despite over two decades of e-learning endeavors and interventions across sub-Saharan Africa and other low- and middle-income countries, e-learning for medical education has not gained momentum and continues to fall short of the anticipated revolution. Many e-learning interventions have been cul-de-sac pilots that have not been scaled up but rather terminated after the pilot phase. This is usually a result of not adopting a system-wide approach, which leads to insufficient scope of training, insufficient technological maintenance and user support, unattainably high expectations, and unrealistic financial planning. Thus, a multitude of e-learning evaluations have failed to provide scientifically sound evidence of the effectiveness of e-learning for medical education in low-resource countries. Instead, it appears that technological development has overwhelmed rather than revolutionized medical education. The question of how to push e-learning into a higher gear in low-resource countries persists. Provision of e-learning as a technology is insufficient. E-learning needs to be vigorously and sustainably integrated into the local educational setting and aligned with national strategies and other national endeavors and interventions. Adhering to a standardized framework for the implementation and evaluation of e-learning endeavors is key, especially to bridge the gap in robust evidence that should also guide e-learning implementations. The primary objective of e-learning for medical education is to strengthen the health system in order to serve the population's health care needs and expectations. Currently, medical e-learning does not measure up to its potential or do justice to medical students in low-resource countries. Technology may help unfold the potential of e-learning, but an all-encompassing change is needed. This can only be achieved through a joint effort that follows a systematic and standardized framework, especially for implementation and evaluation.
Keywords: blended learning; developing countries; eHealth; health system strengthening; health workers; low-resource countries; mHealth; medical e-learning; medical education; sub-Saharan Africa; technology-enhanced learning; universal health coverage.
©Sandra Barteit, Albrecht Jahn, Sekelani S Banda, Till Bärnighausen, Annel Bowa, Geoffrey Chileshe, Dorota Guzek, Margarida Mendes Jorge, Sigrid Lüders, Gregory Malunga, Florian Neuhann. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 09.01.2019.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflicts of Interest: None declared.
References
-
- Frenk J, Chen L, Bhutta ZA, Cohen J, Crisp N, Evans T, Fineberg H, Garcia P, Ke Y, Kelley P, Kistnasamy B, Meleis A, Naylor D, Pablos-Mendez A, Reddy S, Scrimshaw S, Sepulveda J, Serwadda D, Zurayk H. Health professionals for a new century: transforming education to strengthen health systems in an interdependent world. The Lancet. 2010 Dec 04;376(9756):1923–1958. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(10)61854-5.S0140-6736(10)61854-5 - DOI - PubMed
-
- Hampshire K, Porter G, Owusu S, Mariwah S, Abane A, Robson E, Munthali A, DeLannoy A, Bango A, Gunguluza N, Milner J. Informal m-health: How are young people using mobile phones to bridge healthcare gaps in Sub-Saharan Africa? Soc Sci Med. 2015 Oct;142:90–9. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.07.033. https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0277-9536(15)30049-6 S0277-9536(15)30049-6 - DOI - PubMed
-
- Franz-Vasdeki J, Pratt B, Newsome M, Germann S. Taking mHealth Solutions to Scale: Enabling Environments and Successful Implementation. JMTM. 2015 Jan;4(1):35–38. doi: 10.7309/jmtm.4.1.8. - DOI
-
- World Health Organization . Atlas of eHealth country profiles 2015: The use of eHealth in support of universal health coverage. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2015.
-
- International Telecommunications Union. Broadband Commission for Sustainable Development; 2017. [2018-12-24]. Digital Health: A Call for Government Leadership and Cooperation between ICT and Health https://www.broadbandcommission.org/Documents/publications/WorkingGroupH... .
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous
