| Ferbuary
2008 - Volume 2, Issue 1
LAUNCH OF MMU (MULTIMEDIA
MEDICAL UNIVERSITY)
The human population has a history
of regional and national advances in science, industry and
enlightened thought, taking us from the building of simple
tools to an understanding of the beginnings and the nature
of the universe, which we inhabit.
Obviously our thirst for knowledge
has been linked to our advances as a global population, with
technology, art, philosophy, science and medicine contributing
to our greater understanding, and the ability to have some
degree of authority over our own lives.
Much of this knowledge has extended
to the reach of most humans - and the internet, in modern
times, has allowed for greater access to repositories of information
and education.
There are areas of education however,
with a huge financial premium on them and much of this is
for the right reasons. Those practising in various scientific,
educational and medical fields, need to be properly schooled
to ensure that when they put that education into practise,
it is achieving the aims of the education.
Unfortunately the price of access
to some of this knowledge means that potential scholars in
many countries cannot afford it and in the case of postgraduate
medical education this is possibly the most problematic and
restricted, while being a basic right for all humans - that
is, access to proper medical care.
This leaves some countries with few
or no trained doctors and even in the wealthiest countries
there are shortages. It also means that those in low-income
nations who are able to access medical education because of
money or luck, use their degrees as a ticket to a better life
in a developed country, looking for their skills. On an individual
basis you cannot blame people looking for a more advantageous
life for themselves and their families but generally it just
perpetuates the drain of resources from poor countries to
wealthy countries, where the shortages in trained medical
personnel also exist.
Now is the time is to look at inequities
of access to medical education particularly, in an age when
Information and Communications Technology (ICT) does provide
for strategies for innovative and strategic means of better
and cheaper distribution of, and access to, vital knowledge
not just in the interests of individual access for the student,
but universal access to the means of making it a better world
for all.
Knowledge leads to enlightenment
of thought, creativity, compassion and empathy and possibly
world peace via better public and academic education.
Attempts have been made, in recent
times, to look at the global problem of inequities in medical
education and practice.
The dearth of high quality educational
resources in some regions is self evident, with many global
doctors practising in fields in which they have no formal
training whatsoever. These doctors however are filling vital
roles and doing the best they can under the 'local' circumstances.
Good global education needs to fit
the requirements of a greatly diverse consumer, with diverse
values, diverse levels of prior training, and be accurate
in all situations.
These problems are magnified when
dealing in medical education, particularly primary care, and
when dealing with a Multinational approach and a multinational
endpoint.
The Applied Sciences of Oncology
Distance Education project
The International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) and the Regional Cooperative Agreement for Research,
Development, and Training Related to Nuclear Science and Technology
(RCA) financed a Distance Learning Course on the Applied Sciences
of Oncology, to be delivered on multimedia CD ROM. This training
course is an outcome of an IAEA Technical Cooperation Project
implemented under the (RCA). RCA is an intergovernmental agreement
among seventeen Member States of the IAEA in the Asia and
the Pacific Region.
Following the identification of the
shortage of well qualified radiation oncologists in the region,
the Member States of the RCA decided to address this problem
through the development of distance learning material. The
National Project Coordinators also assisted in the pilot testing
of the training material. Three RCA Member States, three AFRA
(Regional Cooperative Agreement for the Africa Region) Member
States and two ARCAL (Regional Cooperative Agreement for the
Latin America Region) participated in the pilot testing of
the distance learning material.
The requirement was to 'educate without
teaching', for fear that an untrained doctor may follow the
instruction by rote, for example, in every case of breast
cancer, when it is the lymph nodes that are involved, that
indicate appropriate treatment. Any prior level of medical
knowledge was also not to be assumed, so the project also
involved complementing or reviewing 'basic training'.
Essentially the task was to combine
science with socio-economics and to look in depth at the many
issues involved. While initially developed as a training aid,
it was deemed in 2005 a successful TC by the IAEA and accepted
as global curriculum to train 900 oncologists in developing
nations every 5 years.
The major challenge in the ASO project
was the learning environment. In the case of the ASO project
the environment was multimedia CD as it required complex scoring
and tracking, access to web based services from the CD itself
- video, pfd, and animations plugged in, date stamp recorded
on course certificate/report as each module was completed.
To localise content you need to look
at both ends of the process. In the case of global medicine
the source of the medical education is as important as the
endpoint (the global doctor, registrar or medical student).
Medical education is usually written for the audience it is
going to teach, within a process and with certain facilities,
which match the conditions within which the resultant medical
graduate will practice.
The launch of MMU aims to extend
the concept to family medicine, with the major aim to bring
top quality, affordable medical education to where it is most
needed.
The MMU courseware therefore concentrates
on the global family doctor/family phsycian. The Masters and
Graduate Diploma provides a
..
The pragmatic approach extends to
the research components and we are asking participating doctors
in developing nations to identify real research needs in their
own country so that all work undertaken addresses real problems
and needs in the country where the doctor practises.
The education itself is written by
university based medical educators, in western countries,
and is also quality assured.
Additionally it has been reviewed
for a variety of international requirements, including best
practice, respect for all cultures and religions, and includes
education on those areas not well addressed in western education,
e.g. malaria and other tropical diseases.
As most family doctors in developing
nations also perform minr ir general surgery, a special feature
of MMU is the Department of Surgery, which teaches basic principles
and real surgery skills, via interactive video of complete
surgical procedures.
The course also reviews basic anatomy
and undergraduate surgery, with a view to covering the full
requirements for a Diploma in Surgery. All aspects of general
surgery are covered initially in the courseware, and eventually
neurosurgery and cardiac surgery will be introduced.
It is know that most family doctors
in developing nations by necessity have to perform all such
proedures, so MMU provides top level tar8inig material, nit
even found in modern postgardaue surgical education.
All courseware is hosued on CD ir
DVD, and each orogram is tracked and self-reporting. Particpants
print out their rersukts from the CD once completed and forward
to MMU for verification and awarding of diplomata.
Access to global medical education
involves three basic issues, and the first is the content
and the focus of that education. It is the experience of the
authors that medical education currently tends to stop at
borders and that education within national boundaries can
have a focus that depends on the wealth of that country. In
wealthy counties there is much education and focus on diseases
of wealth, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and type 2, but
little focus or need for the same on malnutrition, malaria,
typhoid, cholera and other even preventable disease.
This can disadvantage both ends of
the spectrum.
The global community misses out on
the contribution to real education needs as well as the wealthy
community through the medicalisation of what is often lifestyle
or cultural or media induced trends. With emphasis and money
spent on cure and amelioration, there is less emphasis on
self-help and discipline.
The second aspects are affordability
and accessibility. With few quality education facilities within
a country, or with poor access due to war, famine, national
catastrophe or other ignorance, the potential scholar has
to finance their own solution. This is not as big a problem
to the wealthy in the community, but the wealthy have greater
access to all forms of education and therefore choice. If
we focus on those who have the commitment and the ability
but not the money, or the required gender, that is the vast
majority of international medical students, then both accessibility
and affordability are the major problems, but in the solving
of this conundrum, it provides a great solution to the inequities
of the healthcare of the global population. And it is good
economics and good epidemiology, as pockets of illness and
disease have an even greater ability these days to affect
the global population, such as our experience with SARS, avian
flu and HIV-AIDS
Issues of affordability
Even giving that the individual developing
nations medical student could afford the course at an overseas
institution (not withstanding the high degree of variability
of quality in institutions even within countries) there is
also travel, accommodation, cost of bureaucracy, cost of personal
support and issues of loneliness, isolation, cultural differences
and other compounding factors.
And affordability must always have
a national perspective. If a doctor practising in a developing
country, earns the equivalent of $US 200 year, most sources
of outside education are immediately placed out of reach.
The reverse of the national exchange
rate however, can be put to good use. Spending 'outside' money
within a developing country however sees costs greatly reduced,
or a solution taking advantage of existing infrastructure
is even better.
Information and communication technology
however, has given us the means of global public and professional
education. Even in developing countries most educated people
would have email and access to a PC . Using these as mass
distribution tools, in a strategic and focused
The global acceptance to these pragmatic
approaches to delivery education at affordable rates to each
c has shown the vision of the people in these countries involved
and not just to use the approach to catch up to world standards
but to provide a more enhanced learning environment using
professional ICT based interactive medical education.
MMU provides three levels of payment
based on World Bank designated purchasing price parity ppp
(2005) of countries and provides a three tier approach to
payment. Costs are one off and no travel or accommodation
is required. Research activities may involve some small further
cost, but if set up to benefit the country and practice of
the participant, this can be offset.
For further details visit www.MultimediaMedicalUniversity.com
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