Promoting innovation: Enhancing transdisciplinary opportunities for medical and engineering students.

Abstract:

PURPOSE:Addressing current healthcare challenges requires innovation and collaboration. Current literature provides limited guidance in promoting these skills in medical school. One approach involves transdisciplinary training in which students from different disciplines work together toward a shared goal. We assessed the need for such a curriculum at Dartmouth College. METHODS:We surveyed medical and engineering students' educational values; learning experiences; professional goals; and interest in transdisciplinary education and innovation. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics. RESULTS:Shared values among student groups included leadership development, innovation, collaboration, and resource sharing. Medical students felt their curriculum inadequately addressed creativity and innovation relative to their engineering counterparts (p < 0.05). Medical students felt less prepared for entrepreneurial activities (p < 0.05), while engineering students indicated a need for basic medical knowledge and patient-oriented design factors. Despite strong interest, collaboration was less than 50% of indicated interest. CONCLUSIONS:Medical and engineering students share an interest in the innovation process and need a shared curriculum to facilitate collaboration. A transdisciplinary course that familiarizes students with this process has the potential to promote physicians and engineers as leaders and innovators who can effectively work across industry lines. A transdisciplinary course was piloted in Spring 2017.

journal_name

Med Teach

journal_title

Medical teacher

authors

Brazile T,Hostetter Shoop G,McDonough CM,Van Citters DW

doi

10.1080/0142159X.2018.1426841

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2018-12-01 00:00:00

pages

1264-1274

issue

12

eissn

0142-159X

issn

1466-187X

journal_volume

40

pub_type

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