Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide

Conventional processes of pathology education have been disrupted by the pandemic of 2020, forcing a re-evaluation of the means of teacher-learner interactions. Digital and remote teaching methods have become the standard, spearheaded by several national and international organizations and enforced...

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Main Authors: Lewis A. Hassell, Anoshia Afzal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2021.647345/full
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spelling doaj-9839af4bef99455eb8dd6b797308f1092021-03-17T05:42:32ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Communication2297-900X2021-03-01610.3389/fcomm.2021.647345647345Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges WorldwideLewis A. HassellAnoshia AfzalConventional processes of pathology education have been disrupted by the pandemic of 2020, forcing a re-evaluation of the means of teacher-learner interactions. Digital and remote teaching methods have become the standard, spearheaded by several national and international organizations and enforced by a need to social distance during a pandemic. At the same time, the public health predictions regarding the impact of non-communicable diseases on the developing world, and the resultant increased demand for pathology services to help cope with that tidal wave of disease, presents a challenge to a declining population of pathologists in North America. However, the shift in teaching methods has produced a wealth of on-line training resources. This offers for the first time a leveraging effect on the teaching value of pathology expertise, largely concentrated in the developed world, and an opportunity to both enhance and equitize training internationally, potentially sufficient to meet the rising wave of non-communicable diseases ahead in the next 20 years. We propose four next steps to take advantage of the current opportunity to meet this challenge: Curate and organize digital training materials; Invest in the digital pathology infrastructure for education and clinical care; Expand student exposure to pathology through virtual or in person electives; Develop further competency-based rather than time-based certification and board eligibility.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2021.647345/fullvirtual pathology educationpathology manpowerlow-resource settingscancer prevalencedigital pathology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lewis A. Hassell
Anoshia Afzal
spellingShingle Lewis A. Hassell
Anoshia Afzal
Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide
Frontiers in Communication
virtual pathology education
pathology manpower
low-resource settings
cancer prevalence
digital pathology
author_facet Lewis A. Hassell
Anoshia Afzal
author_sort Lewis A. Hassell
title Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide
title_short Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide
title_full Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide
title_fullStr Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide
title_full_unstemmed Pandemic Opens Opportunities to Solve Pathology Manpower Challenges Worldwide
title_sort pandemic opens opportunities to solve pathology manpower challenges worldwide
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Communication
issn 2297-900X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Conventional processes of pathology education have been disrupted by the pandemic of 2020, forcing a re-evaluation of the means of teacher-learner interactions. Digital and remote teaching methods have become the standard, spearheaded by several national and international organizations and enforced by a need to social distance during a pandemic. At the same time, the public health predictions regarding the impact of non-communicable diseases on the developing world, and the resultant increased demand for pathology services to help cope with that tidal wave of disease, presents a challenge to a declining population of pathologists in North America. However, the shift in teaching methods has produced a wealth of on-line training resources. This offers for the first time a leveraging effect on the teaching value of pathology expertise, largely concentrated in the developed world, and an opportunity to both enhance and equitize training internationally, potentially sufficient to meet the rising wave of non-communicable diseases ahead in the next 20 years. We propose four next steps to take advantage of the current opportunity to meet this challenge: Curate and organize digital training materials; Invest in the digital pathology infrastructure for education and clinical care; Expand student exposure to pathology through virtual or in person electives; Develop further competency-based rather than time-based certification and board eligibility.
topic virtual pathology education
pathology manpower
low-resource settings
cancer prevalence
digital pathology
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2021.647345/full
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