articleBMC Medical Informatics and Decision MakingOct 30, 2012GOLD OA

Smartphone and medical related App use among medical students and junior doctors in the United Kingdom (UK): a regional survey

King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust · University of Nottingham

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Smartphone usage has spread to many settings including that of healthcare with numerous potential and realised benefits. The ability to download custom-built software applications (apps) has created a new wealth of clinical resources available to healthcare staff, providing evidence-based decisional tools to reduce medical errors.Previous literature has examined how smartphones can be utilised by both medical student and doctor populations, to enhance educational and workplace activities, with the potential to improve overall patient care. However, this literature has not examined smartphone acceptance and patterns of medical app usage within the student and junior doctor populations.

Methods

An online survey of medical student and foundation level junior doctor cohorts was undertaken within one United Kingdom healthcare region. Participants were asked whether they owned a Smartphone and if they used apps on their Smartphones to support their education and practice activities. Frequency of use and type of app used was also investigated. Open response questions explored participants' views on apps that were desired or recommended and the characteristics of apps that were useful.

Citation impact

604
total citations
FWCI
95.03
Percentile
100%
References
24
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medical education
  • Health informatics
  • Health care
  • Download
  • Smartphone app
  • Computer-assisted web interviewing
  • Medicine
  • Family medicine
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