MJ Jim Yen's research while affiliated with University of Maryland, Baltimore and other places

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Publications (2)


Survey of handheld computing among medical students
  • Article

July 2006

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34 Reads

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50 Citations

Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine

Michael A Grasso

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MJ Jim Yen

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The purpose of this study was to identify trends in the utilization and acceptance of handheld computers (personal digital assistants) among medical students during preclinical and clinical training. We surveyed 366 medical students and collected information on computer expertise, current handheld computer use, predicted future use, and user acceptance. Handheld computers were primarily used for personal applications by students during their preclinical training and as drug references and clinical calculators during their clinical training. In the future, all participants predicted they would use handheld computers at significantly higher rates and on a broader range of medical applications. The adoption of handheld computing was independent of user satisfaction. Those with more clinical experience were less satisfied with handheld computers, suggesting that the expectations of the more experienced users were not met. The lack of institutional support was seen as a key limitation.

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Trends in Handheld Computing Among Medical Students

February 2005

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22 Reads

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1 Citation

AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings / AMIA Symposium. AMIA Symposium

The purpose of this study was to identify trends in the utilization and acceptance of handheld computers (personal digital assistants) among medical students during preclinical and clinical training. These results can be used to identify differences between preclinical and clinical users, differences between current use and idealized use, and perceived limitations of these devices.

Citations (2)


... Several studies have been conducted to evaluate the practical application of mobile devices and computers in medical education; however, literature is scarce on the educational pedagogy needed to use this technology (29,30). If we have limited resources to deliver m-Learning, it needs to be theoretically justifiable (31). ...

Reference:

Introducing a mobile learning model in medical education during COVID-19; a critical review
Survey of handheld computing among medical students
  • Citing Article
  • July 2006

Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine

... In October 2010, another study showed that 85% of all American adults, 96% of those were aged 18-29 years, and 90% of those aged 30-49 years own a cell phone (Smith 2010a). Work has previously been done looking at the trends of handheld computing and mobile device use in graduate medical education (Barrett et al. 2004;Sutton et al. 2004;Mattana et al. 2005;Khan et al. 2007; Morris et al. 2007), with undergraduate medical students (Grasso et al. 2005;Kho et al. 2006;Kennedy et al. 2008;Norman et al. 2008;Chatterley & Chojecki 2010;Ferenchick et al. 2010;Lasserre et al. 2010), and the health care setting (Garritty & El Emam 2006;Ranson et al. 2007;Trelease 2008;Evans & Stacey 2009). Looking specifically at medical students, Grasso et al. (2005) surveyed preclinical and clinical medical students and found that the clinical students used drug references and medical calculators on their handheld device. ...

Trends in Handheld Computing Among Medical Students
  • Citing Article
  • February 2005

AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings / AMIA Symposium. AMIA Symposium