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Published in: Dermatology and Therapy 4/2024

Open Access 26-03-2024 | Original Research

Virtual Learning Decreases the Carbon Footprint of Medical Education

Authors: Divya Sharma, Julianne Rizzo, Yvonne Nong, Lilia C. Murase, Sydney Fong, Kenny Lo, Misha Rosenbach, Raja Sivamani, Jenny E. Murase

Published in: Dermatology and Therapy | Issue 4/2024

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Abstract

Introduction

The environmental impact of holding in-person academic conferences and continuing medical education (CME) programs can be significant. In-person conferences provide a unique social and professional platform to engage in networking and foster professional development; however, there is an opportunity for hybrid and virtual platforms to provide CME for broader audiences looking to improve their clinical skills and strengthen their knowledge base. This study seeks to describe the reduction in carbon emissions associated with a webinar hosted by an online dermatology-focused medical education platform.

Methods

This cross-sectional study used the location of deidentified virtual attendees of a webinar to predict the carbon emissions produced if attendees had instead traveled to the location of the most recent Integrative Dermatology Symposium (Sacramento, CA). Following collection of each virtual attendee’s location, the mode of transportation was predicted on the basis of each participant’s distance to the conference.

Results

The estimated carbon emissions were calculated for 576 participants. The total estimated, unadjusted carbon emissions for both attendees predicted to fly or drive was 370,100 kg CO2. The emissions produced per participant from those expected to fly to an in-person CME after adjusting for all additional passengers on every flight were 4.5 kg CO2. The emissions produced per participant from those expected to drive were 42.7 kg CO2.

Conclusion

The use of a virtual CME webinar led to a significant reduction in travel-related carbon dioxide emissions when compared to running the same program in-person event. When accounting for all passengers traveling via plane on any flight, driving to an event produced more emissions per participant than flying.
Literature
9.
go back to reference Belzer A, Rosenbach M, Parker ER, Barbieri JS, Nelson CA. Reducing the carbon footprint of travel to an international dermatology conference: a case study of the Medical Dermatology Society’s Carbon Footprint Program. Int J Dermatol. 2023;62(7):e377–9. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijd.16497. (Epub 2022 Nov 13 PMID: 36371718).CrossRefPubMed Belzer A, Rosenbach M, Parker ER, Barbieri JS, Nelson CA. Reducing the carbon footprint of travel to an international dermatology conference: a case study of the Medical Dermatology Society’s Carbon Footprint Program. Int J Dermatol. 2023;62(7):e377–9. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1111/​ijd.​16497. (Epub 2022 Nov 13 PMID: 36371718).CrossRefPubMed
Metadata
Title
Virtual Learning Decreases the Carbon Footprint of Medical Education
Authors
Divya Sharma
Julianne Rizzo
Yvonne Nong
Lilia C. Murase
Sydney Fong
Kenny Lo
Misha Rosenbach
Raja Sivamani
Jenny E. Murase
Publication date
26-03-2024
Publisher
Springer Healthcare
Published in
Dermatology and Therapy / Issue 4/2024
Print ISSN: 2193-8210
Electronic ISSN: 2190-9172
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13555-024-01120-4

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