Nadine Dexter Archives | Āé¶¹Ō­““ News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Fri, 23 Aug 2013 16:56:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Nadine Dexter Archives | Āé¶¹Ō­““ News 32 32 Newest Med School Tool: iPad Minis /news/newest-med-school-tool-ipad-minis/ Fri, 23 Aug 2013 15:36:40 +0000 /news/?p=52159 The college’s Harriet F. Ginsburg Health Sciences Library handed out the iPads in the largest distribution since the digital learning program began in 2010. That year, the medical school’s first 100 students received iPads as holiday gifts from a local philanthropist, the Ginsburg Family Foundation.

ā€œIpads were new on the market at that time, and people saw the potential, but weren’t quite sure what they could do with the technology,ā€ said Library Director Nadine Dexter. But the donation helped the Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine become a national leader in digital medical education. Today, 4 textbooks are available on the tablets. Using technology, students can take notes right in the ā€œvirtualā€ book, zoom in and out of the pages, watch videos of specific patient cases and even compare and share notes with classmates through a special social media feature. Health databases like DynaMed and Hippocrates allow students to quickly look up drug and disease information from an approved and accurate source. Students can buy books by the chapter, reducing the cost of expensive textbooks, and don’t have to carry around heavy books or a laptop.

ā€œIt’s very interesting to listen to students talk about how they’re integrating the use of a tablet into their daily learning styleā€ Dexter added. ā€œFrom taking notes to answering email and pulling up library e-books and articles, they’ve gotten pretty creative.ā€

The medical school’s library is 98 percent digital, and its motto is ā€œinformation anywhere, any time, on any deviceā€ because digital material means students don’t have to be in the library to access information. The class of 2017 is the first to get the mini version of the iPad, which the library team hopes will be more convenient to carry and navigate, especially in clinical settings.

Many of the new first-year students had heard about the library’s iPad learning program, and were delighted to learn they were receiving their tablets before classes even started. ā€œIt’s definitely one of the factors I took into account when choosing my medical school,ā€ said first year student, Sean Chagani. ā€œI saw students walking the halls looking through CT scans and x-rays on their iPad. I thought it was a really cool, innovative way to essentially take your work home with you.ā€

Other students are looking forward to using the tablet to lighten their everyday load. ā€œIt’s definitely a step forward in education in terms of its technology,ā€ first year student Brandon Hendrix said. Ā ā€œIn undergrad, I would spend hundreds of dollars on giant textbooks. Now I’ll have them on the iPad, which will be a lot more convenient.ā€

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Medical School a National Leader in Interactive Learning /news/medical-school-a-national-leader-in-interactive-learning/ Tue, 23 Aug 2011 14:30:19 +0000 /news/?p=26196 The Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine is taking the lead nationally in the use of interactive systems that help medical students participate more in their learning. From iPads that broadcast normal and irregular heart sounds to software that allows students to test themselves, these new interactive teaching methods make learning more interesting, engaging and relevant.

Those features appeal to ā€œmillennial-agedā€ learners like Āé¶¹Ō­““ medical students, who prefer group learning that’s interactive and provides frequent feedback, rather than passive lecture-based learning.

A company named Inkling has spent the last year developing electronic textbooks and is working closely with the College of Medicine. At a recent presentation to students and faculty members, Inkling representative Eric Petit explained that textbooks are boring, heavy and expensive, and that students studying from computers have many advantages over those studying on printed pages. With E-books, students can interact with the material rather than study in isolation. And Inkling’s system uses social networking so students can share notes and receive faculty instructions and feedback right on their fingertips.

End-of-chapter quizzes help test the student’s retention of material – and offer additional explanation of why an answer is wrong. E-textbooks include three-dimensional, animated drawings and give a student the ability to hide labels on those drawings, fill them out and test their knowledge. The books also contain video presentations of topics such as physical exams and patient interviews.

E-textbooks also have a bottom line advantage. Students can purchase specific chapters of a medical textbook that a faculty member assigns for $1.99 to $6.99 a chapter, rather than having to buy the entire book.

This year, the Harriett F. Ginsburg Health Sciences Library purchased E-textbooks for students. Petit said the Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine is one of just four medical schools nationwide that is a leader in embracing interactive learning. The others are Stanford, Brown and University of California-Irvine.

ā€œThis is instant information at the point of care,ā€ said library director Nadine Dexter, a proponent of interactive learning who oversees a library that is 98 percent digital. ā€œMedicine is exploding with information. This new way of providing information to our students is stunning, engaging and exciting.ā€

 

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Patient Safety Highlights Med School Curriculum /news/patient-safety-highlights-med-school-curriculum/ Mon, 13 Jun 2011 17:27:45 +0000 /news/?p=24433 One of the AAMC’s current initiatives is ā€œBest Practices for Better Care,ā€ a multi-year initiative to improve the quality and safety of health care.

A Ā College of Medicine team presented one poster on the use of technology to improve patient safety. Dr. Bethany Ballinger, an Orlando emergency physician and assistant professor of emergency medicine and clinical informatics, Nadine Dexter, director of the Harriet F. Ginsburg Health Sciences Library, and Dr. Mariana Dangiolo, professor of family medicine, highlighted the college’s use of iPod touches. The hand-held devices contain Epocrates, a drug database of over 3,300 drugs. The poster explained how medical students use their iPods to identify potentially dangerous drug interactions for patients they see during their training with local doctors. In addition, College of Medicine students use Geriatrics at Your Fingertips software on mobile devices as they work with senior patients.

Another AAMC poster, co-authored by Dr. Ballinger, showed how the College of Medicine became the first American medical school to initiate the World Health Organization’s (WHO) patient safety curriculum. The WHO identifies 11 areas that are key to improving patient safety, including infection control, surgery, medication and practical ways to analyze how mistakes are made.

Patient safety is one of the College of Medicine’s Longitudinal Curricular Themes (LCTs), interdisciplinary topics interwoven into the four-year curriculum. And the college’s message at the AAMC was that topics like patient safety must be emphasized at every turn.

ā€œSafety is such an important thread in the curriculum,ā€ said Dr. Ballinger said, who is director of the patient safety LCT. ā€œYou can’t just have a course on patient safety for three days and then be done with it. Patient safety must be a part of everything you do.ā€

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Benefactor's Gift: iPads for all 100 M.D. Students /news/benefactors-gift-ipads-for-all-100-m-d-students/ Thu, 16 Dec 2010 17:32:10 +0000 /news/?p=18890

Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine students received a high-tech gift for their Christmas stockings Wednesday as local philanthropist Alan Ginsburg gave new iPads to each of the school’s 100 M.D. students. The hand-held electronic devices will allow students to take notes, review on-line scientific journals and 3-D medical imaging, and even take paperless exams. And students’ use of the iPad will be part of a two-year research study on the use of technology in medical education.

Students cheered as Dr. Deborah German, vice president for medical affairs and dean of the College of Medicine, announced the gift. During the past few days, rumors were circulating about the possibility of an iPad holiday gift for the medical students. ā€œBut we didn’t want to get our hopes up and then be disappointed if the gift ended up being chocolate,ā€ said M-1 student Alvin deTorres. Alvin said he was delighted with the portable technology because it will provide immediate access to the college’s Harriett F. Ginsburg Health Sciences Library, which is 98 percent digital.

Nadine Dexter, library director, told students that the iPads were a ā€œgift of loveā€ from Ginsburg, who thought they would be a fitting tribute to his wife’s love of reading and learning. ā€œWith the iPads, you have information in an ā€˜anytime, anywhere’ environment,ā€ she said. The Ginsburg family’s earlier donation of $4 million created the Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine’s library. ā€œWe are delighted to be part of the Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine and the way it is training doctors for the 21st century continues to exceed our highest expectations,ā€ Ginsburg said. ā€œWe hope this gift provides one more way for the students to develop the skills they need to take care of us all.ā€

iPads offer several learning advantages for medical students: They can download PowerPoints from class lectures and type notes directly on the presentation. The device’s imaging provides what Dexter described as ā€œexquisiteā€ 3-D images of systems such as the brain and vertebrae, and the large screen allows students to have electronic journals, books and databases at their fingertips.

M-1 student Marcos Colon said he had just told his father last week that he intended to steal Dad’s iPad over winter break to help with his medical school studies. ā€œNow I don’t have to steal his,ā€ he said. ā€œI have one of my own.ā€

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Āé¶¹Ō­““ Med Library Joins UF, Miami National Network /news/ucf-med-library-joins-uf-miami-national-network/ Sat, 15 May 2010 17:43:37 +0000 /news/?p=12921 The national library network organizes its resource libraries through eight regions across the United States. Florida’s other resource libraries are at the University of Florida, Florida State University, the University of Miami and the University of South Florida colleges of medicine.

NN/LM’s mission is to “advance the progress of medicine and improve the public health by providing all U.S. health professionals with equal access to biomedical information and improving the public’s access to information to enable them to make informed decisions about their health.”

“Being selected as a resource library is an honor,” said Nadine Dexter, director of the Harriet F. Ginsburg Health Sciences Library. “It says the NN/LM feels we have the professional staff, the training and the resources to fulfill the duties of a resource library.”

Resource libraries provide doctors and patients with the most current research, journal articles, audiovisual materials, literature and patient treatment protocols. They coordinate and share resources with other area libraries so they can tell physicians almost instantly what materials are available in the region. “By working together in a network, we can act as a giant card catalog,” Nadine said. In addition to helping doctors who are on staff at colleges of medicine, resource libraries also provide sole practitioners with vital information through a “Lonesome Doc” reference program.

Providing current and trusted data is key for the library staff. “We want the library to be a comfortable, accessible and user-friendly place,” Nadine said. “We want to provide a well-trained staff who are subject matter experts on all the information that clinicians, researchers, students and faculty need.”

For more: Wendy Spirduso Sarubbi,Ā Āé¶¹Ō­““ College of Medicine Information/Publication Services, 407-823-0233 orĀ wsarubbi@mail.ucf.edu

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