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Título
B-learning training in the certification of causes of death
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Medical certificate of death
B-learning training intervention
Before and after intervention design
Mortality statistics
International standards of certification
Fecha de publicación
2015-01
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Alonso-Sardón, M., Iglesias-de-Sena, H., Sáez-Lorenzo, M., Fernández, A. J. C., Salvat-Puig, J., & Mirón-Canelo, J. A. (2015). B-learning training in the certification of causes of death. Journal of forensic and legal medicine, 29, 1-5. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jflm.2014.10.003
Resumen
[EN]Introduction: An adequate certification of causes of death is essential for Public Health. The objective of
this work is to improve the professional competence of medicine students and family doctors with regard to the certification of causes of death according to the international regulations of the WHO.
Methods: Intervention-formation, before and after design, addressed to students of Medicine in their last
year (6th year), and Family Doctors and Interns. The blended learning or b-learning program consisted in
an on-site seminar-workshop, plus basic information/documentation stored in an on-line platform,
together with the preparation of Certificates of Causes of Death based on Clinical Histories of real cases.
Results: 308 students participated in the program. We observed an individual improvement in the
professional competence in all certifications of death, which was significant in 3 out of 5 cases (it was not
significant in a medical-legal case of violent death and the case of a pluripathological chronic patient).
The intermediate causes improved in all cases. Most formal aspects of the certification improved with
significant changes. In the group of 62 Family Doctors and interns who took part in the program there
were improvements in the basic or underlying causes in 4 of the 5 cases and improvements in the formal
quality of the assessment, although less significantly than in students, because they started with better
basal indexes in their certificates in the Before stage of the study.
Conclusions: Blended learning training has shown to be effective in improving the professional
competence, both in students of the Degree of Medicine and in practicing Family Doctors and Interns.
URI
ISSN
1752-928X
DOI
10.1016/j.jflm.2014.10.003
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