reviewJournal of Medical Internet ResearchJan 4, 2016GOLD OA

The Effectiveness of Blended Learning in Health Professions: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Blended learning, defined as the combination of traditional face-to-face learning and asynchronous or synchronous e-learning, has grown rapidly and is now widely used in education. Concerns about the effectiveness of blended learning have led to an increasing number of studies on this topic. However, there has yet to be a quantitative synthesis evaluating the effectiveness of blended learning on knowledge acquisition in health professions.

Objective

We aimed to assess the effectiveness of blended learning for health professional learners compared with no intervention and with nonblended learning. We also aimed to explore factors that could explain differences in learning effects across study designs, participants, country socioeconomic status, intervention durations, randomization, and quality score for each of these questions.

Citation impact

707
total citations
FWCI
201.80
Percentile
100%
References
110
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Meta-analysis
  • Systematic review
  • MEDLINE
  • Psychology
  • Medicine
  • Medical education
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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Funding