Objective: Medical students pursuing orthopedic surgery residency build foundational knowledge during clinical rotations. Most clinical rotations, home and away, were paused during the COVID-19 pandemic. Given the lack of structured fourth-year medical student (MS4) education for basic orthopedics, educators developed the Ortho Acting-Intern Coordinated Clinical Education and Surgical Skills (OrthoACCESS) curriculum in 2019. This study demonstrates the accessibility and usability of a MS4 virtual orthopedic curriculum and examines the curriculum's role in increasing learner familiarity with basic orthopedic topics in 2020.
Design: OrthoACCESS faculty presented weekly lectures from July to October 2020 using Zoom Webinar. Website content included recorded webinars, external resources, and skills videos. Registrants were anonymously surveyed after each webinar characterizing the knowledge and utility of individual lectures. After the webinar series, registrants were emailed an anonymous post-curriculum survey characterizing their experience using the OrthoACCESS curriculum.
Results: OrthoACCESS had 1062 registrants, with 59% (624/1,062) MS4s. 4528 users accessed the OrthoACCESS website from 66 countries. The 15 lectures were viewed 3743 times, 1553 live views and 2190 asynchronous views. 444 postwebinar surveys were completed. Weekly response rates ranged from 18% to 45%. Respondents felt more knowledgeable and more able to apply their knowledge after viewing each lecture (p < 0.001), and found the webinars to be well-organized, well-paced, enthusiastically taught, and level-appropriate. 122/976 (13%) students and 45/291 (15%) faculty completed the postcurriculum survey. Faculty reported that OrthoACCESS was "quite useful" (4 [3-5]) for providing knowledge for an incoming orthopaedic intern. Faculty and students would recommend OrthoACCESS to future learners (5 [4-5]).
Conclusions: OrthoACCESS delivered foundational musculoskeletal instruction during a period of increased need. In its initial iteration, this virtual curriculum demonstrated high utilization in the United States and internationally and improved participants' self-reported topical knowledge and ability to apply it clinically.
Keywords: orthopedic education; structured orthopedic curriculum; subinternship curriculum.
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