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Implementing a PDA Requirement: The Good, the Bad, and the Successful

Implementing a PDA Requirement: The Good, the Bad, and the Successful. May 12, 2005 - Spring CSG Meeting Brian Boston Georgetown University. School of Medicine Key Facts. 700 Medical Students No student computer requirement Medical library is central technology provider

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Implementing a PDA Requirement: The Good, the Bad, and the Successful

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  1. Implementing a PDA Requirement: The Good, the Bad, and the Successful May 12, 2005 - Spring CSG Meeting Brian Boston Georgetown University

  2. School of Medicine Key Facts • 700 Medical Students • No student computer requirement • Medical library is central technology provider • Wi-Fi network on campus • Clinical sites off-campus • Physicians using handheld devices

  3. Pre-PDA Requirement • “Unofficial” requirement • PDA potpourri • PDA station • Limited support and training • Device recommendations

  4. Pre-PDA Requirement Issues • Difficult to support multiple devices • Syncing personal information on public PC • Application installation is time intensive • Device funding not allocated • Varying levels of student PDA adoption/use • Lack of driving purpose

  5. Why a PDA Requirement? • Meet LCME student clinical encounter requirement • Further informatics curriculum objectives • Manage support issues • Lower student costs • Formalize institutional commitment

  6. Patient and Clinical Encounter System

  7. Components of PDA Requirement • Make the case • Set timeline and notify users • Select hardware • Purchase devices • Deploy software • Provide support/training

  8. Making the Case • School of Medicine formed Informatics PDA Committee • Committee coordinated with Information Services • Committee drafted formal PDA Requirement stating need • Committee on Medical Education approved plan

  9. Setting Timeline and Notifying Users • Requirement must be in place in year prior to be included in financial aid • Notified users well in advance of mandatory device • Distributed PDAs to 2nd-year students in March • Students used devices in spring course prior to 3rd-year clinical rotations

  10. Selecting Hardware Why Palm Tungsten C? • PACE ran best on this Palm • PDA with Wi-Fi, SD slot, and keyboard • IMAP SSL email • Within price range • Familiarity with device • History of supporting Palm OS

  11. Purchasing Devices • Device cost part of student technology fee • Included in student financial aid package • PDA Bundle: • Tungsten C • SD Card • Palm Extended Warranty • Medical Dictionary • Reduced price through volume discounts (CDWG, PalmOne, and Stedman’s)

  12. Deploying Software Used CardBackup for installing software • Capture image of PDA applications on master device to an SD card • Retain application configurations • Select applications to backup • Quick and easy restoring of backup • Shareware • No advance setup of hardware needed

  13. Providing Support/Training • Library created help guides for PDA support site • Library distributed quick start guide with PDAs • Information Services posted instructions for configuring email • Library offered drop-in help sessions • Students shared tips among each other

  14. Keys to Success • Assess need in light of curricular goals • Identify driving application/purpose • Integrate with institutional applications (email, calendar) • Limit platforms/devices • Test hardware/software • Tailor support/training

  15. Future Goals/Options • Evaluate new devices • Review/evaluate Wi-Fi access • Integrate PACE with LDAP • Add content channels • Facilitate faculty adoption of PDAs • Investigate Blackboard PDA version • Offer course lecture podcasts

  16. Website/Contact Dahlgren Library PDA Site: http://dml.georgetown.edu/pda Contact: Brian Boston Academic Technology Coordinator, Medical Center Center for New Designs in Learning & Scholarship Georgetown University bostonb@georgetown.edu

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