A global model for effective use and evaluation of e-learning in health.

Healthcare systems worldwide face a wide range of challenges, including demographic change, rising drug and medical technology costs, and persistent and widening health inequalities both within and between countries. Simultaneously, issues such as professional silos, static medical curricula, and perceptions of "information overload" have made it difficult for medical training and continued professional development (CPD) to adapt to the changing needs of healthcare professionals in increasingly patient-centered, collaborative, and/or remote delivery contexts. In response to these challenges, increasing numbers of medical education and CPD programs have adopted e-learning approaches, which have been shown to provide flexible, low-cost, user-centered, and easily updated learning. The effectiveness of e-learning varies from context to context, however, and has also been shown to make considerable demands on users' motivation and "digital literacy" and on providing institutions. Consequently, there is a need to evaluate the effectiveness of e-learning in healthcare as part of ongoing quality improvement efforts. This article outlines the key issues for developing successful models for analyzing e-health learning.

[1]  A cure for health costs. , 1992, Clinical laboratory management review : official publication of the Clinical Laboratory Management Association.

[2]  R. Butler,et al.  Population aging and health , 1997, BMJ.

[3]  Mohd Hishamuddin Harun Integrating e-Learning into the workplace , 2001, Internet High. Educ..

[4]  Marion J. Ball,et al.  E-health: transforming the physician/patient relationship , 2001, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[5]  John C. Morey,et al.  Error reduction and performance improvement in the emergency department through formal teamwork training: evaluation results of the MedTeams project. , 2002, Health services research.

[6]  Will e-learning improve clinical judgment? , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[7]  Emil Jovanov,et al.  Guest Editorial Introduction to the Special Section on M-Health: Beyond Seamless Mobility and Global Wireless Health-Care Connectivity , 2004, IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine.

[8]  Roger L. Hayen,et al.  Evaluating E-Learning: A Case Study , 2004, J. Comput. Inf. Syst..

[9]  E-Learning in Public Organizations , 2004 .

[10]  G. Walton,et al.  Effective e-learning for health professionals and students--barriers and their solutions. A systematic review of the literature--findings from the HeXL project. , 2005, Health information and libraries journal.

[11]  J. Wyatt,et al.  eHealth and the future: promise or peril? , 2005, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[12]  Screening in Europe , 2006 .

[13]  M. Farrell Learning differently: e-learning in nurse education. , 2006, Nursing management.

[14]  George M. Piskurich Online learning: E‐learning. Fast, cheap, and good , 2006 .

[15]  R. Leipzig,et al.  The impact of E-learning in medical education. , 2006, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[16]  Maged N Kamel Boulos,et al.  The emerging Web 2.0 social software: an enabling suite of sociable technologies in health and health care education. , 2007, Health information and libraries journal.

[17]  Robert Beaglehole,et al.  Global public health: a scorecard , 2008, The Lancet.

[18]  D. Cook,et al.  Internet-based learning in the health professions: a meta-analysis. , 2008, JAMA.

[19]  W. James,et al.  WHO recognition of the global obesity epidemic , 2008, International Journal of Obesity.

[20]  56 All Tooled Up: An Evaluation of End of Life Care Tools in Care Homes in North Lancashire , 2009 .

[21]  Jeanne Schreurs,et al.  E-Learning Readiness in Organisations - Case Healthcare , 2009, Int. J. Adv. Corp. Learn..

[22]  8 Governance in Changing Times: A Study of Hospice Trustees in the United Kingdom , 2009 .

[23]  T. Diefenbach NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT IN PUBLIC SECTOR ORGANIZATIONS: THE DARK SIDES OF MANAGERIALISTIC ‘ENLIGHTENMENT’ , 2009 .

[24]  Modernizing health care: Reinventing professions, the state and the public , 2010 .

[25]  Andrée Roy SMEs: How to Make a Successful Transition From Conventional Training Towards e-Learning , 2010, Int. J. Adv. Corp. Learn..

[26]  H. Fineberg,et al.  Health professionals for a new century: transforming education to strengthen health systems in an interdependent world , 2010, The Lancet.

[27]  Hassan M. Selim Ahmed,et al.  Hybrid E-Learning Acceptance Model: Learner Perceptions. , 2010 .

[28]  WenChieh Wu,et al.  The Effectiveness of e-Learning for Blended Courses in Colleges: A Multi-level Empirical Study , 2010, Int. J. Electron. Bus. Manag..

[29]  D. Cook,et al.  Instructional Design Variations in Internet-Based Learning for Health Professions Education: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis , 2010, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[30]  R. Andrews Does e-learning require a new theory of learning? Some initial thoughts , 2011 .

[31]  Adnan Omar,et al.  Management of Innovative E-Learning Environments , 2011 .

[32]  Yuan-Ting Zhang,et al.  Guest Editorial Introduction to the Special Section: 4G Health - The Long-Term Evolution of m-Health , 2012, IEEE Trans. Inf. Technol. Biomed..