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A systematic review of serious games in medical education

Iouri Gorbaneva ,  Alexandra Pomaresc , Vivian Delgadilloe , Francisco Yepesb and Óscar Muñoz


Contact: Iouri Gorbanev yurigor@javeriana.edu.co Economics and Management School, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogotá, D.C, Colombia

Ethical approval: The project was approved by the Authors’ University Ethics Committee.


Acknowledgements: The authors thank Yaneth Lizarazo for her help in developing the pedagogical dimension of the research. Author’s contributions Iouri Gorbanev, Sandra Agudelo-Londoño conceived the paper, collected and processed the data, and wrote the paper. Francisco Yepes, Ariel Cortes, Rafael Gonzalez, Alexandra Pomares, Vivian Delgadillo y Óscar Muñoz constructed the instrument, collected the data, and revised paper final version.


Disclosure statement: No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.


Funding: This research was possible thanks to financial support provided by Pontificia Universidad Javeriana to the Project ‘APP CODIFICO – Aplicación didáctica móvilpara desarrollar capacidades de codificación diagnóstica en profesionales de medicina. Bogotá D.C, Colombia 2015’ [Project number IDPPTA 6891/IDPRY 7020].

Abstract

Introduction: The literature shows an optimistic landscape for the effectiveness of games in medical education. Nevertheless, games are not considered mainstream material in medical teaching. Two research questions that arise are the following: What pedagogical strategies do developers use when creating games for medical education? And what is the quality of the evidence on the effectiveness of games?

 
Methods: A systematic review was made by a multi-disciplinary team of researchers following the Cochrane Collaboration Guidelines. We included peer-reviewed journal articles which described or assessed the use of serious games or gamified apps in medical education. We used the Medical Education Research Study Quality Instrument (MERSQI) to assess the quality of evidence in the use of games. We also evaluated the pedagogical perspectives of such articles.

Results: Even though game developers claim that games are useful pedagogical tools, the evidence on their effectiveness is moderate, as assessed by the MERSQI score. Behaviourism and cognitivism continue to be the predominant pedagogical strategies, and games are complementary devices that do not replace traditional medical teaching tools. Medical educators prefer simulations and quizzes focused on knowledge retention and skill development through repetition and do not demand the use of sophisticated games in their classrooms. Moreover, public access to medical games is limited.

 
Discussion: Our aim was to put the pedagogical strategy into dialogue with the evidence on the effectiveness of the use of medical games. This makes sense since the practical use of games depends on the quality of the evidence about their effectiveness. Moreover, recognition of said pedagogical strategy would allow game developers to design more robust games which would greatly contribute to the learning process.

Keywords: Video games; medical education; evidence-based practice; comparative effectiveness research; review

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