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Microlearning to teach geriatric principles in hospitals: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Age Ageing. 2026 May 4;55(5):afag129. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afag129.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hospital-based education in geriatric medicine is often limited in availability and accessibility. Microlearning is defined as short, on-the-go, focused educational interventions (<15 minutes) and offers a practical way to deliver key geriatrics concepts in time-constrained environments. This systematic review investigated the effectiveness of microlearning to learn geriatric medicine principles for hospital-based clinicians.

METHODS: This systematic review with meta-analysis (PROSPERO: CRD42023422522) involved a comprehensive search across five databases. Studies evaluating microlearning interventions for hospital-based clinicians (medical, nursing and allied health) were included. Two independent reviewers conducted title/abstract screening and full-text review. Effectiveness was assessed using Kirkpatrick model, which evaluates educational outcomes across four levels: participant reaction, learning, behaviour and clinical practice. Data were synthesised narratively, and meta-analysis conducted using random-effects model. Study quality and risk of bias were assessed using Medical Education Research Quality Instrument and Newcastle-Ottawa scale-education.

RESULTS: Of 15 232 articles retrieved, 15 met inclusion criteria, mostly pre-post implementation studies (11/15, 73%). Common interventions included bedside teaching (6/15, 40.0%), pocket cards (5/15, 33.3%) and e-modules (4/15, 27%), focusing on delirium (9/15, 60%) and dementia (3/15, 20%). Of 40 educational outcomes measured, 90% showed positive results, and 30% were statistically significant. Meta-analysis indicated significant improvements in delirium knowledge (SMD 0.80, 95% CI 0.49-1.10, P < .00001) and recognition (SMD 0.91, 95% CI 0.10-1.72, P = .03).

CONCLUSION: Microlearning shows promise as an effective educational intervention for learning geriatric medicine principles, particularly recognising delirium. Further research is needed to assess impact on patient outcomes and guide implementation in current training programs.

PMID:42143602 | DOI:10.1093/ageing/afag129

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