2020
DOI: 10.33314/jnhrc.v18i3.2851
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Students’ Perspective on Online Medical Education Amidst The COVID-19 Pandemic in Nepal

Abstract: Background: The lockdown strategy adopted to contain the spread of current pandemic of coronavirus disease has affected all sectors of life globally. Nepal also instructed all the educational institutions to shut down, medical colleges being no exception. One month into the lockdown all the medical colleges in Nepal started online classes to keep pace with the academic calendar. This preliminary survey analyses the students’ perspective on newly introduced online medical education system. Methods: This c… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…A higher percentage of students had experienced challenges relating to their personal study habits, situation at home, and interaction with educators. Studies on online learning in developing countries often concentrated on students' limited access to devices and the internet [20,37,38]. Our results implied that providing gadgets to the students, as some medical schools had rightfully and already done, might not be enough to ensure successful learning outcomes, especially if other barriers were not adequately addressed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A higher percentage of students had experienced challenges relating to their personal study habits, situation at home, and interaction with educators. Studies on online learning in developing countries often concentrated on students' limited access to devices and the internet [20,37,38]. Our results implied that providing gadgets to the students, as some medical schools had rightfully and already done, might not be enough to ensure successful learning outcomes, especially if other barriers were not adequately addressed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…(2) improve access to health professions' training, increasing the number of health workers and encouraging their retention in regional units; and (3) facilitate collaboration with institutions that have more resources [17]. Notwithstanding, in survey studies during the COVID-19 pandemic in India [18], Pakistan [19], Nepal [20], Jordan [21], and Libya [22], the majority of medical students had a negative perception or expressed dissatisfaction towards online learning.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also technical support was offered at the request of users [18]. Like several authors from different parts of the world [3,12,[19][20][21][22], we were interested in exploring student's perspectives on online medical education as an alternative to traditional education. e majority of students felt they had a good knowledge of ICT and two-thirds reported use in medical studies mainly for information retrieval and course review.…”
Section: Distance Learning At the Marrakesh Medical Schoolmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Nepal, for example, 76.5% had never attended online courses and therefore the same proportion (77.8%) preferred traditional classroom instruction in the future. Medical students did not find online classes as effective as the traditional classroom teaching; it could be made more interactive and productive by introducing interactive and brainstorming sessions complementing the conventional face-to-face education [20]. e same observation was made according to a study in Jordan with 488 medical and dental students (1 to 3 year) [24].…”
Section: Students' Perspectives and Associated Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With increasing number of webinars and virtual meetings, this modality of knowledge transfer can become boring if it stretches over long hours, are frequent or happen to be repetitions and lacks interesting and fresh insights. 7 Virtual meetings though convenient and safe takes extra time to set up and can get easily off-track if conducted without agenda and within certain protocols. With major chunk of work being done on virtual platform these days, our screen time has prolonged leading to increase in strain on eyes, physical inactivity, headache and even anxiety and increase in blood pressure.…”
Section: Learners' Perception and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%