One of my goals for MissionToLearn
is to periodically highlight organizations that are doing interesting work to
support the development and dissemination of learning technologies.
Along those lines, I recently had the opportunity to attend, for the second
year in a row, the annual conference of Medbiquitous, an organization that
bills itself as the creator of “technology standards to advance healthcare
education and connect the leading entities in professional medicine and
healthcare.”
Now, on the surface, a standards group may sound like one of
the drier targets I could have picked, but then any organization that coins its
name from the infrequently-used SAT vocabulary stumper “ubiquitous” and has
even gone so far as to publish an eponymous song on its Website surely must have something of value to offer. As Medbiq itself puts it, the end
goal of its standards work is to “make healthcare education more accessible,
measurable, and effective, thereby improving patient care.” A laudable goal in
this day and age to say the least.
The key to Medbiquitous’ eventual success—and I do, in fact,
believe this is one set of standards that will not simply be put out to pasture
after an initial mad dash get boatloads of documentation across the finish
line—is the effort of seven distinct working groups. Full information can be
found at http://www.medbiq.org/working_groups,
but worth calling out is the fact that Medbiquitous has focused the majority of
the early working group efforts towards nailing down a learning object model
(drawing on the SCORM initiative of the ADLNet and a
professional profile standard. Following closely behind is an activity report
standard. These three together address a core issue across the medical
community, and for that matter, pretty much any community in which continuing
education (CE, CME, CEU, etc.), credentialing and certification are important.
They define how learning opportunities can be packaged and shared, how key
learner information is to be maintained, and how the combination of the two can
be shared with the relevant bodies for managing medical education data.
Some of the more cutting edge work being done by
Medbiquitous members is aimed at point-of-care learning—actually providing
physicians with critical knowledge while they are in the process of actively
caring for patients—and virtual patient education based on interactive computer
programs that simulate real life clinical scenarios. Progress in each of these
areas can be tracked on their respective Working Group pages and also in MELD the E-learning
Discourse community that Medbiquitous has deployed to support its broader
efforts. Visitors to the MELD site will find a range of great resources, many
of which are applicable outside of healthcare e-learning scenarios. In general,
both Medbiquitous and MELD provide a great example of a sector seizing the
opportunity that Web-based learning presents and managing its own destiny.
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posted on May 15, 2007
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{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
Thanks for the great overview, Jeff. I would encourage you and your readers to consider submitting an abstract for the 2008 meeting, May 13-15 here in Baltimore. To see the call for abstracts, visit: http://www.medbiq.org/callforabstracts/
–Valerie