Context
|
|
Sociocultural norms |
The acceptability and adoption of digital education as a form and norm of education within the society |
|
Institutional norms |
The acceptability, impact, considerations, and processes concerning the adoption of digital education at the institutional level |
|
Settings |
The setting in which digital health education is conducted or implemented, including clinical or classroom environments; low-, middle-, and high-income countries; and rural or urban environments |
|
Level of education |
The impact and integration of digital education with other forms of education (eg, inter- and intraprofessional training opportunities) and clinical work in which participants are engaged |
Infrastructure
|
|
Physical |
The physical learning space within which the in-person component of blended digital health education is taking place |
|
Digital |
The information and communication technology devices (both hardware and software) to support and create learning environments (virtual environments, digital networks, technological modifications) or media for digital health education, as well as the speed and capacity of internet access |
|
Regulatory |
Policies and regulatory standards for health professionals’ licensing and accreditation, as well as those relating to the design and delivery of digital health professions education |
|
Human resources |
The human resources required for digital health education to be maintained and sustained, including educators, administrators, and information technology staff |
Education
|
|
Modality |
The choice and configuration of digital education modality (eg, online learning and m-Learning) and its potential blending with in-person education |
|
Instructional design |
The method and practice of digital health professions education encompassing teaching strategies, learning principles, learning outcomes, and the assessment approach |
|
Content |
Health professions education area, discipline, theme, or topic delivered via digital education |
|
Engagement |
The level of communication, interactivity, or immersion of participants taking part in digital health professions education |
|
Assessment |
Measurement of digital health professions education conducted at the individual and institutional level to determine its impact on educational and clinical outcomes |
Learners |
Health professionals with distinctive needs, competencies, digital literacy, knowledge, skills, and attitudes toward working and learning, both individually or as a group |
Research |
Systematic study of digital health professions education to create and disseminate new knowledge and allow for more effective and efficient adoption, implementation, and transfer of interventions to various contexts—this encompasses experimental, observational, descriptive, and qualitative research |
Quality assurance |
A context-specific and systematic evaluation of practices and procedures to understand the current state and improve the performance of digital health education in a particular setting |