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Abstract
The risk of contagion and the lockdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic forced a change in teaching methodologies in radiology. New knowledge about the disease that was being acquired on a daily basis needed to be rapidly spread worldwide, but the restrictions imposed made it difficult to share this information. This paper describes the methodology applied to design and launch a practice-based course on chest X-ray suggestive of COVID-19 right after the pandemic started, and aims to determine whether asynchronous online learning tools for radiology education are useful and acceptable to general practitioners and other medical personnel during a pandemic. The study was carried out from April to October 2020 and involved 2632 participants. Pre- and post-testing was used to assess the participants’ gain of knowledge in the course content (paired t-tests and chi-squared tests of independence). A five-point Likert scale questionnaire inspired by the technological acceptance model (TAM) was provided to evaluate the e-learning methodology (ANOVA tests). The results from the pre- and post-tests showed that there were significant differences in the scores before and after completing the course (sample size = 2632, response rate = 56%,
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Details

1 Graphics and Imaging Laboratory, Universitat de Girona, Girona, Catalonia
2 Departament d’Informàtica, Matemàtica Aplicada i Estadística, Universitat de Girona, Girona, Catalonia
3 Centre de Diagnòstic per la Imatge, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia
4 Department of Radiology and IDIBGI, Hospital Universitari Dr Josep Trueta (Institut de Diagnòstic per la Imatge), Girona, Catalonia