Table of Contents
Part 1: The changing landscape of information and communication technology (ICT) in health care: implications for health professionals’ education1. Challenges in using clinical information systems2. Patient safety and quality assurance thrusts in digital healthcare and their influence on clinicians and patients3. The changing nature of the patient-clinician relationships4. Patients’ use of ICT and its implications5. Drowning in (big) data: self-tracking and the quantified self movement6. Vison(s) for health professions education of the 21st Century
Part 2: Experiences from the field7. Medical and other health professions’ schools for the 21st century8. Training clinicians in informatics
Part 3: Evidence from research9. Barriers to accessing technology for teaching clinical students, residents, and practitioners in and out of academia10. Academic educator competencies in teaching exam room computing and informatics11. Knowledge and attitudes of learners and teachers about aspects of healthcare in the digital world12. Influence of interventions on presence and behaviour of learners and practitioners in social media13. Digital natives and tourists in health IT14. Integration of clinical and educational interventions: How when and where?15. How to evaluate educational interventions to prepare health professionals for the challenges of the information age? (methodological focus)What have we learned? Findings from evaluation studies
Summary and Future Research Directions