KeyLIME - Key Literature in Medical Education
Bringing you the main points of a medical education article in just 20 minutes.
Earn MOC credits under Section 2 for each podcast.
With your hosts
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Dr. Jason Frank | Dr. Jon Sherbino | Dr. Linda Snell | Dr. Lara Varpio |
Listen to the latest podcast:
https://keylimepodcast.libsyn.com/
About KeyLIME
Key Literature in Medical Education (KeyLIME) is a weekly podcast produced by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. Articles that are important, innovative, or will impact your educational practice are discussed.
How do you keep up-to-date with the medical education literature? How do you find the important articles, let alone have time to read and critique them? In clinical medicine, the number-needed-to-read (NNR) is 14. You would need to read 14 articles from one of the top 20 clinical journals to find one methodological sound, clinically important manuscript! The NNR for medical education has not been calculated, but it’s likely as daunting.
KeyLIME does the work for you. In each episode our hosts discuss, in about 10 minutes, the key points of a medical education article.
The KeyLIME podcasts are not specialty-specific. Listeners gain the advantage of hearing about valuable research that is published outside of top medical education journals or their own specialty-specific publication. In addition, each podcast earns listeners MOC credits under Section 2!
KeyLIME, the number-needed-to-listen is one.
Methodology
The papers reviewed by KeyLIME are as eclectic as the medical education literature itself.
Articles are identified through:
- a regular systematic scan of MEDLINE using the CanMEDS Roles as keywords
- automated searches of the table of contents of the KeyLIME journal collection, which includes journals from clinical medicine, medical education, general education, and beyond…
- key publications submitted by listeners
Articles are tagged for inclusion in the KeyLIME database. Articles are selected for a key review based on:
- clinical importance
- educational impact
- methodological innovation
Questions, comments, suggestions?
Contact us at keylime@royalcollege.ca
Music Credit
Corporate Software by Scott Holmes Music/ Broadcast License A
Disclaimer
The opinions and views expressed in the Key Literature in Medical Education podcast are not the views of The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. They belong solely to the individual reviewers.
Trouble accessing our podcasts?
If you are experiencing issues in downloading the latest Keylime podcast via iTunes, please visit the Apple site for troubleshooting tips. Please remember that our podcasts can always be downloaded or streamed directly from our website.