An electronic survey of preferred podcast format and content requirements among trainee emergency medicine specialists in four southern African universities
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Date
Authors
Ekambaram, K.
Lamprecht, H.
Lalloo, Vidya
Caruso, N.
Engelbrecht, Andreas
Jooste, W.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Global usage of educational Emergency Medicine (EM) podcasts is popular and ever-increasing. This
study aims to explore the desired content, format and delivery characteristics of a potential educational, contextspecific Southern African EM podcast, by investigating current podcast usages, trends and preferences among
Southern African EM registrars of varying seniority.
METHODS: We developed an electronic survey - using a combination of existing literature, context-specific
specialist-training guidance, and input from local experts – exploring preferred podcast characteristics among
EM registrars from four Southern African universities.
RESULTS: The study’s response rate was 75%, with 24 of the 39 respondents being junior registrars. Ninety-four
percent (94%) of respondents used EM podcasts as an educational medium: 64% predominantly using podcasts to supplement a personal EM study program. The primary mode of accessing podcasts was via personal
mobile devices (84%). Additionally, respondents preferred a shorter podcast duration (5–15 min), favoured
multimedia podcasts (56%) and showed an apparent aversion toward recorded faculty lectures (5%). Eighty-two
percent (82%) of respondents preferred context-specific podcast content, with popular topics including toxicology (95%), cardiovascular emergencies (79%) and medico-legal matters (74%). Just-in-Time learning proved
an unpopular learning strategy in our study population, despite its substantial educational value.
CONCLUSION: Podcast-usage proved to be near-ubiquitous among the studied Southern African EM registrars.
Quintessentially, future context-specific podcast design should cater for mobile device-use, shorter duration
podcasts, more video content, context-specific topics, and content optimised for both Just-in-Time learning.
Description
Keywords
Emergency medicine, Online education, Podcasts, Asynchronous online learning, Free open-access medical education (FOAMed)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Ekambaram, K., Lamprecht, H., Lalloo, V. et al. 2021, 'An electronic survey of preferred podcast format and content requirements among trainee emergency medicine specialists in four Southern African universities', African Journal of Emergency Medicine, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 3-9.