Use of Blogs in Dermatology Education

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Use of Blogs for Dermatology Education Rosa Taberner Hospital Son Llàtzer (Palma de Mallorca)

description

Charla sobre el uso de blogs en dermatología en la sesión de e-learning del World Teledermatology Congress en Barcelona, 19 de septiembre de 2014

Transcript of Use of Blogs in Dermatology Education

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Use of Blogs for Dermatology Education

Rosa TabernerHospital Son Llàtzer (Palma de Mallorca)

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Web 2.0 applications

• Web 2.0 applications have been increasingly adopted by many online health-related professional and educational services.

• Opportunity for powerful information sharing and ease of collaboration.

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“Infoxication”

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@FisioenAP

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Content curation

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PLE

• Personal Learning Environment.• Systems that help learners take control of and

manage their own learning. This includes providing support for learners to:– Set their own learning goals.– Manage their learning, both content and process.– Communicate with others in the process of

learning.

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PLE for @rosataberner

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What’s a blog?

• A blog (web log) is a discussion or informational site published on the internet and consisting of discrete entries ("posts") typically displayed in reverse chronological order (the most recent post appears first).

• Blogs are interactive, allowing visitors to leave comments.

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Dermatologic blogosphere

Patients(divulgation, marketing, branding)

General Practitioners

(learning)

Dermatologists(learning,

news)

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Divulgation…

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For general practitioners

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For dermatologists

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So… Let’s blog

• www.dermapixel.com• Blog of “daily dermatology”• Addressed to family doctors, paediatricians,

dermatology residents, students and other health workers.

• Main goals:– Evaluation tool for rotating residents in

Dermatology Service at Son Llatzer Hospital.– Teaching dermatology tool.– Independence (no funding).

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Blog dynamics

Saturday• Clinical case

Comments

Wednesday• Answer

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Subscriptions

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Subscriptions

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Subscriptions

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Subscriptions

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HON*-Code

• The HONcode certification is an ethical standard aimed at offering quality health information. It demonstrates the intent of a website to publish transparent information.

• The HONcode is the most widely accepted reference for online health and medical publishers.

*Health On the Net Foundation

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Blogging is easy• You don’t need technical skills

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Blogging is free (it can be)

• Free blogging platforms.

• Blogger (Google), WordPress.

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Digital reputation, visibility

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Prizes…

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Radio program

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Other blogs…

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Feedback

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The dark side of blogging

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Privacy

• Clinical images (real cases).

• Consent from patients.

• Invented names, situations.

• No legal conflict.

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Digital divide

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Venereal diseases

• Blogger could ban “sensitive content”.

• No genital lesions*

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Moderate comments

• Personal consultations• Destructive

comments (trolls)• Spam

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Fear of being copied

Creative Commons

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No money

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Present… and future

• Guest blogging (invite other dermatologists to collaborate)• E-book (free)

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[email protected]

@rosataberner

www.dermapixel.com

www.facebook.com/dermapixel