Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W173300303> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 82 of
82
with 100 items per page.
- W173300303 endingPage "306" @default.
- W173300303 startingPage "303" @default.
- W173300303 abstract "Abstract This article describes how the author created an academic website in reproductive medicine, and presents data on visitor profiles. The website provides access to interactive lectures, computer-generated tests, quizzes, searchable databases, and a bulletin board for approved users. The website is international in scope, collaborative, asynchronous in delivery, flexible, and responsive to learner needs. Visitors from industrialized countries accessed the lessons on polycystic ovary syndrome, amenorrhea, and infertility. In 2004, the total number of unique visitors was 21,269. Introduction In recent years, increasing numbers of medical institutions in the United States and abroad have incorporated innovative methods of teaching and research using the Internet technologies (Barzansky et al. 2000; Jenkins, 2002; Zondervan et al. 2002). The Association of Professors of Gynecology and Obstetrics (APGO) website reveals several medical centers in the United States and Canada have also established departmental websites (APGO, 2005). The links provide information on what other institutions are doing with regard to medical education programs, residencies and fellowships, departments and faculty, patient care and research. Besides healthcare professionals, many infertile couples are actively using the Internet for their fertility problems (Weissman et al. 2000; Epstein et al. 2002; Haagen et al. 2003). However, posting of information on the Internet does not always undergo peer reviews or need some standard for publication. The use of standardized curriculum and innovative techniques for providing education are important steps for graduate training of future doctors in reproductive medicine (Soules, 1994; Davis et al. 1995; Jenkins, 1999; Alvero et al. 2004). The World Wide Web provides a delivery system for transferring information to many users without the barriers of time and geography (Chu & Chan, 1998). Developing web-based learning represents an evolution that needs experienced website designers, surveys of the targeted audience, focus groups, and analysis of server data or a combination of these methods (Letterie et al. 1994, 1996; Jenkins et al. 2001). Web-based learning may be suitable setting for women's health issues because of the multidisciplinary nature and need for vertical integration throughout medical school curriculums. According to a recent study, the web-based instruction resolved barriers associated with limited curriculum time and faculty availability, provided an accessible and standard curriculum, and met the needs of adult learners in a medicine clerkship (Zebrack et al. 2005). More studies in defined clinical settings are needed to realize the full potentials of web-based learning for women's health education. Websites designed at academic institutions and departments must present authentic content, be consistent in navigation, use simple graphics, and highlight ease of maintenance (Singh, 2002). Towards this end, the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the Louisiana State Health Sciences Center in Shreveport launched the first academic website in September 1997. This article describes how the author created an academic website in reproductive medicine, and presents data on visitor profiles to show how they used the website in recent years. Methods The departmental server (PowerEdge 2300, Dell Computer Corporation, Round Rock, TX) runs under Windows 2000 operating system (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA). Ancillary units installed were an automated tape backup, uninterruptible power supply, an antivirus software program, and a redundant array of independent disks to provide safety measures against unexpected system failures. The design for the website followed guidelines proposed by the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA) core standards for publications (Silberg et al. 1997). The individual pages were created using a software that creates web pages with hypertext markup language (NetObjects Fusion, Website Pros, Inc. …" @default.
- W173300303 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W173300303 creator A5081980683 @default.
- W173300303 date "2005-09-22" @default.
- W173300303 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W173300303 title "An Academic Website in Reproductive Medicine" @default.
- W173300303 cites W114953224 @default.
- W173300303 cites W1982907555 @default.
- W173300303 cites W1987946652 @default.
- W173300303 cites W1993044851 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2002436288 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2003038490 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2016051658 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2024730818 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2048281948 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2051274535 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2063315028 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2069141333 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2082438102 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2095304052 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2107514789 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2109632535 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2147343615 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2168167073 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2344199203 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2409605826 @default.
- W173300303 cites W2059611964 @default.
- W173300303 hasPublicationYear "2005" @default.
- W173300303 type Work @default.
- W173300303 sameAs 173300303 @default.
- W173300303 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W173300303 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W173300303 hasAuthorship W173300303A5081980683 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C110875604 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C136764020 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C161191863 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C19417346 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C47177190 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C509550671 @default.
- W173300303 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C110875604 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C136764020 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C15744967 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C161191863 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C19417346 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C41008148 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C47177190 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C509550671 @default.
- W173300303 hasConceptScore W173300303C71924100 @default.
- W173300303 hasIssue "3" @default.
- W173300303 hasLocation W1733003031 @default.
- W173300303 hasOpenAccess W173300303 @default.
- W173300303 hasPrimaryLocation W1733003031 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W1557519813 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W1602775343 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W1982695327 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W1987946652 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2001357416 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2001698774 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2029452728 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2034702699 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2040160640 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2049125615 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2120210642 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2144052922 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2283849298 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W257611918 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2616502665 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2730588584 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2943042402 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2975162203 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W647340454 @default.
- W173300303 hasRelatedWork W2519554297 @default.
- W173300303 hasVolume "9" @default.
- W173300303 isParatext "false" @default.
- W173300303 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W173300303 magId "173300303" @default.
- W173300303 workType "article" @default.