Digital Technology: Digital health: a neglected part of health curricula?
Author(s) -
Mrudula Utukuri,
F. D'Souza,
Alexander Deighton,
Elizabeth Le,
Benedict Osei-Boadu,
Nishita Gadi,
Ariana Axiaq,
Yuri YM Aung,
Bridget Agboola,
Chandini P. Chand,
Connor Dibblin,
Chandni Patel,
Mohsin Abedi,
J Hirniak,
Ngan Hong Ta,
James H.F. Rudd,
Rajiv Sethi
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
future healthcare journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2514-6653
pISSN - 2514-6645
DOI - 10.7861/fhj.2021-0102
Subject(s) - thriving , health care , curriculum , digital health , digital society , government (linguistics) , public relations , business , investment (military) , digital literacy , medical education , health professionals , engineering ethics , medicine , political science , psychology , engineering , economic growth , internet privacy , pedagogy , computer science , economics , politics , linguistics , philosophy , law , psychotherapist
With growing government investment and a thriving consumer market, digital technologies are rapidly transforming our means of healthcare delivery. These innovations offer increased diagnostic accuracy, greater accessibility and reduced costs compared with conventional equivalents. Despite these benefits, implementing digital health poses challenges. Recent surveys of healthcare professionals (HCPs) have revealed marked inequities in digital literacy across the healthcare service, hampering the use of these new technologies in clinical practice. Furthermore, a lack of appropriate training in the associated ethical considerations risks HCPs running into difficulty when it comes to patient rights. In light of this, and with a clear need for dedicated digital health education, we argue that our focus should turn to the foundation setting of any healthcare profession: the undergraduate curriculum.
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