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Implementation and Preliminary Evaluation of an Entrepreneurship, Biomedical Innovation, and Design Pathway in a School of Medicine Curriculum [preprint]

Hafer, Nathaniel
Keenan, Christian
Deb, Anindita
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Abstract

Background: New educational curricula are emerging to train physicians to practice healthcare in the 21st century. The University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School T.H. Chan School of Medicine (UMass Chan) implemented an MD curriculum redesign in the fall of 2022 that included seven educational pathways, including Entrepreneurship, Biomedical Innovation and Design. This pathway is modeled after the I-Corps curriculum with added material regarding engineering design. This manuscript describes this pathway curriculum and provides preliminary evaluation data and learning outcomes.

Methods: First-year (Class of 2027) and second-year (Class of 2026) pathway students were invited to participate in online surveys evaluating course material and their knowledge of course content. Course evaluations and self-assessments were performed on a 4 or 5 point Likert scale. The material assessment comprised of multiple-choice questions; some had four options while others had five. Simple means were calculated for each question of the self-assessment, and as an aggregate. A two-sample t-test was performed using those means to assess statistical significance. A distribution of correct and incorrect answers was generated between the pre and post survey results, and a chi-squared analysis was used to determine whether the two correct/incorrect distributions were significantly different.

Results: Initial results show that the program was well received, with 15/20 (75%) of first year students rating the experience as good or excellent and 8/10 (80%) of second year students rating the experience as good or excellent. Three lectures were provided during the Fall 2023 semester to 11 second-year students. Results of self-assessment of student comfort and understanding of engineering content significantly improved after delivery of these lectures. Objective student knowledge also significantly improved.

Conclusions: This new pathway curriculum at UMass Chan is designed to introduce students to the principles of innovation, entrepreneurship, and technology commercialization. An element of this pathway focused on basic engineering principles provided students with baseline understandings of biomedical design, human factors, and risk/hazard analysis. Despite small sample sizes, the results show improvements in student comfort with the material and knowledge. Novel curricula have the potential to transform medical education and prepare future physicians to practice healthcare in the 21st Century.

Source

Hafer N, Keenan C, Deb A. Implementation and Preliminary Evaluation of an Entrepreneurship, Biomedical Innovation, and Design Pathway in a School of Medicine Curriculum. Res Sq [Preprint]. 2024 Sep 11:rs.3.rs-4870777. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4870777/v1. PMID: 39315248; PMCID: PMC11419257.

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DOI
10.21203/rs.3.rs-4870777/v1
PubMed ID
39315248
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Notes

This article is a preprint. Preprints are preliminary reports of work that have not been certified by peer review.

Funding and Acknowledgements
NH reports funding support from the National Institutes of Health grants UL1TR001453 and U54HL143541, and the National Science Foundation grant 2048498. The funding agencies had no role in the conceptualization, design, data collection, analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.