Abstract
On November 19, 2020, within the framework of the XI National Congress with international participation «Ecology and human health in the North», the All-Russian workshop «Medical morphology and digital learning technologies» was held at the videoconference. The meeting was attended by teachers-morphologists of medical universities and faculties of cities located in territories with especial ecological and geographical conditions of residence and education of students (Yakutsk, Saint-Petersburg, Perm, Omsk, Krasnoyarsk). The current situation in the world, caused by the Covid-19 virus infection pandemic, posed an unprecedented challenge to many social institutions of modern society, including the system of higher medical education and training of medical personnel. She accelerated the controversial, largely uncertain and not painless transition to digitalization of education as part of the implementation of the national digital economy program. Medical higher education, starting from the first courses, is extremely practical in its essence. The existing electronic platforms and digital instruments, despite all their effectiveness, still cannot be an adequate replacement for those technologies that have traditionally served as the educational and methodological base of preclinical disciplines for many decades, while anatomy is the basic practical discipline for all clinical specialties. This situation is not specific only for individual countries, it is the same for the entire medical higher school around the world. The result of the exchange of experience of the anatomical departments of medical universities at the meeting was the conclusion that the weakest link of distance technologies - digital proctoring of practical anatomical knowledge should be organizationally supported in the form of appropriate scientific and pedagogical seminars and conferences, widely published and recommended, are determined its limits, possibilities and use. It is necessary to analyze and revise the existing work programs of disciplines in order to determine the structural sections of the programs of disciplines and the volume of their transfer to digital platforms, partially or completely, or technologically unchanged at all. It is also mandatory to develop new training, retraining and advanced training programs for morphologists who carry out educational activities using an intermediary language and digital technologies. It is recommended that teachers of morphological departments of medical universities and faculties practically master and bring the relevant professional competencies in the field of mastering the tools of the electronic information educational environment to the level of documented professional excellence. At the same time, when creating educational literature, digital tutorials and gadgets on human anatomy, one should strictly adhere to the international anatomical terminology TA-2 (London, 2019) to eliminate the confusion and variety of terms used to denote the same anatomical structures.
About the Authors
Darima K. Garmaeva
Ammosov North-Eastern Federal University, Yakutsk
Russian Federation
Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor, Head of the Department of Normal and Pathological Anatomy, Operative Surgery with Topographic Anatomy and Forensic Medicine of the Medical Institute
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Radik M. Khayrullin
Private University REAVIZ and Academician Pavlov First Saint-Petersburg State Medical University, Saint-Petersburg; Private Medical University REAVIZ, Samara
Russian Federation
Rector, Head of the Department of Morphology and Pathology of the Private University REAVIZ, Professor of the Professor Prives Department of Clinical Anatomy and Operative Surgery of the Academician Pavlov First Saint-Petersburg State Medical University, Saint-Petersburg; Professor of the Department of Clinical Medicine of the Postgraduate Education of the Private Medical University REAVIZ
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Irina A. Balandina
Academician Wagner Perm State Medical University, Perm
Russian Federation
Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor, Head of the Department of Normal, Topographic and Clinical Anatomy, Operative Surgery
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Irina N. Putalova
Omsk State Medical University, Omsk
Russian Federation
Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor, Head of the Department of Human Anatomy
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Lyudmila V. Sindeeva
Professor Voino-Yasenetsky Krasnoyarsk State Medical University, Krasnoyarsk
Russian Federation
Doctor of Medical Sciences, Docent, Head of the Department of Histology, Cytology, Embryology
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Carl G. Basharin
Ammosov North-Eastern Federal University, Yakutsk
Russian Federation
Professor, Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor of the Department of Normal and Pathological Anatomy, Operative Surgery with Topographic Anatomy and Forensic Medicine of the Medical Institute
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Alexander P. Suslo
Omsk State Medical University, Omsk
Russian Federation
Candidate of Medical Sciences, Associate Professor of Department of Human Anatomy
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
Andrey A. Slavnov
Omsk State Medical University, Omsk
Russian Federation
Candidate of Medical Sciences, Associate Professor of Department of Human Anatomy
Competing Interests: The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest in the planning, execution, financing and use of this publication
The experience of several medical universities located in the territories of Russia, where there are special conditions for the use of information technologies in critical situations, has shown that digital education is no better, no worse, no more and no less effective, and no better than traditional education, it is other. And that's all that distinguishes it from the traditional one. Neither by its nature, nor by technology, nor by methodology, it does not change the subjects of the educational process, the essence and content of science and the main goal of education - the transgenerational transfer of knowledge