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2.
Med Educ ; 2024 Apr 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38605442

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Despite tenacious efforts of continuing professional development (CPD) developers and educators, physician engagement in CPD is fraught with challenges. Research suggests that these educational interventions and the maintenance of professional competence systems that mandate them are often seen as impractical, decontextualized and check-box activities by participants. This study explores physicians' learning post graduate medical education (GME) training across their CPD journey to understand how they (a) conceive of themselves as learners and (b) engage in lifelong learning across the course of their professional careers. METHODS: Using narrative inquiry and holistic narrative analysis situated within a social constructivist orientation, we carried out individual interviews with physicians from across a large children's hospital network including academic hospitals, community hospitals and primary care practices. Timelines and story arcs were used to support the narrative analysis's re-storying. RESULTS: Twelve physicians from six different sub-specialties were interviewed. We identified three noteworthy challenges as particularly salient across participants' re-storied narratives: (i) train-on-a-track to treading water, (ii) learning takes a backseat, and (iii) learning through foraging or hunting and gathering. Participants described significant change when transitioning from GME to CPD learning. While participants identified as learners, they described the disorienting impact of losing GME's formal supports and structures. They articulated that patient care trumped learning as their top priority. They lamented having limited insight into their learning needs (e.g. little feedback data) and so resorted to engaging in CPD activities that were readily at hand-but not necessarily relevant-and to finding learning resources that might not be formally recognised for CPD credit. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians' learning journeys post-GME are challenging, and the systems created to support that learning are ill equipped to meet the needs of physicians transitioning from GME to CPD. To encourage meaningful learning, the complex interplay of factors impeding CPD engagement should inform future innovations.

4.
Med Teach ; : 1-8, 2024 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38460500

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Physician educators are often expected to direct educational programs and assume roles that conform to field norms for career advancement but that may not afford meaningful work for educators. The purpose of this study was to describe and analyse the perspectives and actions taken by physician educators in response to tension between feeling compelled to direct an educational program and doing educationally meaningful work. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We used data from a longitudinal study and focused on three participants who, over the course of the five-year study, offered significant insights into how physician educators act in ways that run counter to expectations for career advancement. Our narrative analysis entailed organizing data from interview transcripts into time-ordered displays, weaving data into counternarratives that were edited by participants, and using the theory of faculty agency (and its key constructs, strategic perspectives and strategic action) to thread the stories together. RESULTS: In each counternarrative, the participant deliberated their sense of being a physician educator (strategic perspectives) and when expectations became untenable, they did what they needed to do to engage in meaningful work (strategic action) rather than comply with expectations for career advancement in academic medicine. For one participant, faculty agency meant leaving academic medicine; for another, it meant reducing clinical time so that unpaid time could be devoted to education; and for another, it meant opting not do direct a reputable education program. CONCLUSIONS: Faculty agency is a useful theoretical lens for conceptualizing how physician educators navigate their careers in academic medicine. Counternarratives that illuminate faculty agency offer stories that describe alternate career paths and portend a different future for physician educators.

6.
J Clin Neurophysiol ; 2024 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38376951

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Electroencephalography (EEG) is commonly used in neurology, but there is variability in how neurologists interpret EEGs, potentially from variability in EEG teaching. Little is known about how EEG teaching is done to prepare neurologists for professional practice. METHODS: We interviewed a group of EEG experts to characterize their teaching practices around continuous EEG (cEEG). We used signature pedagogy as a framework to analyze and interpret the data. RESULTS: We identified pervasive and characteristic forms of cEEG teaching. Teaching is based on apprenticeship, relying on "learning by doing" in the context of real-life clinical practice. There are habitual steps that learners take to anchor teaching, which typically occurs during rounds. There is a common language and core knowledge that trainees need to master early in their training. CONCLUSIONS: There are pervasive characteristic forms of cEEG teaching. These findings can help facilitate instructional design and implementation of complementary or enhanced cEEG teaching practices.

7.
J Pain Symptom Manage ; 67(4): e367-e374, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38244707

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: A growth mindset and mastery approach have gained attention as useful learning orientations in medical education, however few studies of interventions to foster these orientations exist. OBJECTIVES: We sought to discover whether a communication skills session on delivering serious news could foster a communication growth mindset and/or a mastery approach in medical students. METHODS: This was an interventional survey study of third-year medical students before and after a session on delivering serious news. Students were administered a communication mindset survey before and after the session; achievement goal and learning environment surveys were administered after the session. Chi-square tests were used to assess the difference in pre and post mindsets. Logistic regression was used to determine the odds of achieving a mastery approach with pre- and post-communication growth mindset as the independent variables. RESULTS: Students' communication growth mindset increased from 79% (n = 186) before the intervention to 92% (n = 142) after the intervention. Achievement goal analysis demonstrated that 64% (n = 91) of students had a mastery approach, 14% (n = 20) had a performance approach and 22% (n = 32) had an avoidant approach. Ninety-nine percent (n = 151) felt the session provided a safe learning environment. The odds of having a mastery approach correlated with both pre and post-intervention growth mindset, with post-session growth mindset having the strongest correlation. CONCLUSIONS: A novel communication skills session on delivering serious news fostered a communication growth mindset in third year medical students. Most students exhibited a mastery approach to learning; this approach was more likely when they had a growth mindset.


Subject(s)
Students, Medical , Humans , Learning , Motivation , Education, Continuing , Communication
8.
Acad Pediatr ; 24(1): 162-172, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37567441

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Some pediatric residents report experiencing less autonomy when working clinically with pediatric hospital medicine (PHM) fellows than with attendings alone. We sought to explore pediatric senior resident (SR) experiences working clinically with PHM fellows, with a focus on characterizing fellow behaviors that could impact perceived resident autonomy. METHODS: In this qualitative study, we conducted virtual semistructured interviews with pediatric SRs. We recorded, deidentified, and transcribed interviews for codebook thematic analysis, making iterative adjustments to our codebook and themes until reaching thematic sufficiency. RESULTS: We conducted 17 interviews. A subanalysis identified key components of the resident mental model of autonomy, including independent clinical decision-making with 3 core qualifiers: 1) plan follow-through, 2) availability of a safety net, and 3) ownership. Our primary analysis identified 4 key themes (with a total of 7 contributory subthemes) describing resident experiences of autonomy, scaffolded based on an organizing framework adapted from Bronfenbrenner's ecological model including 1) microsystem factors (based on direct resident-fellow or resident-leadership team interactions), 2) mesosystem factors (based on fellow-attending interactions), 3) exosystem factors (based on fellow-intrinsic characteristics), and 4) macrosystem factors (cultural values, norms, and policies governing academic pediatrics). CONCLUSIONS: Many factors impact perceived resident autonomy on PHM fellow-inclusive teams. Although some are related to direct resident-fellow interactions, many others are more complex and may reflect resident interactions with the leadership team, attending-fellow dynamics, and the influence of cultural context. Based on our analysis, we propose several best-practice recommendations directed at fellows, attendings, the fellow-attending dyad, and Graduate Medical Education programs overall.


Subject(s)
Hospital Medicine , Internship and Residency , Humans , Child , Fellowships and Scholarships , Hospitals, Pediatric , Education, Medical, Graduate
9.
Am J Hosp Palliat Care ; 41(2): 158-166, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36945136

ABSTRACT

Palliative care (PC) longitudinal curricula are increasingly being recognized as important in Undergraduate Medical Education (UME). They are however, not yet commonplace, and where they do exist may be implemented without a systematic, prospective approach to curriculum evaluation. This paper describes an implementation of a new longitudinal curriculum at the Perelman School of Medicine (PSOM) at the University of Pennsylvania. We used the Context Input Process Product (CIPP) model, a holistic evaluation model, to assess the local environment, design the curriculum, guide the improvement process, and evaluate outcomes. Comprehensive models such as CIPP provide a more robust approach to curriculum evaluation than outcomes-only models and may be of use to other programs who are implementing new curricula or improving upon existing programs.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Medicine , Students, Medical , Humans , Palliative Care , Curriculum
10.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 29(1): 199-216, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37351698

ABSTRACT

Intrinsic inequity in assessment refers to sources of harmful discrimination inherent in the design of assessment tools and systems. This study seeks to understand intrinsic inequity in assessment systems by studying assessment policies and associated procedures in residency training, using general pediatrics as a discourse case study. Foucauldian discourse analysis (FDA) was conducted on assessment policy and procedure documents. Two authors independently prepared structured analytic notes using guiding questions. Documents and respective analytic notes were subsequently reviewed independently by all authors. Each author prepared further unstructured analytic notes on the documents' discourse. The authors then compared notes and constructed truth statements (i.e., interpretations of what the discourse establishes as true about the construct under study) and sub-strands (i.e., themes) that were repeated and legitimized across the documents via iterative discussion. Based on analysis, the authors constructed two truth statements. These truth statements, "good assessment is equitable assessment," and "everyone is responsible for inequity," conceptualized inequity in assessment as an isolated or individual-level aberration in an otherwise effective or neutral system. Closer examination of the truth statements and sub-strands in the discourse presented an alternative view, suggesting that inequity may in fact not be an aberration but rather an inherent feature of assessment systems.


Subject(s)
Internship and Residency , Humans , Child , Policy
12.
J Med Educ Curric Dev ; 10: 23821205231204758, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37822779

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Pediatric residency trainees interface with electrocardiograms (EKG) as part of routine clinical care. Depending on workflow and availability of support staff, trainees may be required to obtain EKGs on patients, though training on this skill varies. Our intervention seeks to train incoming pediatric residents on obtaining EKGs from pediatric patients and identifying common problems that may result in acquisition of low-fidelity EKGs. METHODS: A team of physicians, EKG technicians, and simulation educators designed a 30-min didactic and experiential learning opportunity for incoming pediatric trainees held prior to their start of clinical responsibilities. During the session, trainees were introduced to the basics of EKG acquisition and common quality issues that arise. Afterwards, they practiced placing EKG leads on a mannequin and a live model. A pre- and post-session survey was utilized to assess the session's utility and participant's learning. RESULTS: The intervention was perceived as a valuable experience by participants over the course of 2 years. We found increased participant comfort with performing and troubleshooting EKGs (P<.001). There was a 33% improvement in quality assessment of EKG rhythm strips after the session (P<.001). CONCLUSION: Given the importance of EKGs to the care of pediatric patients, it is essential that pediatricians receive adequate training in acquiring and assessing EKG quality. This intervention was deemed to be highly useful with a demonstrated improvement in EKG troubleshooting skills among first year pediatric residents. This session improves learner comfort with essential clinical responsibilities and identification of low-quality EKGs that often warrant repeat testing.

14.
J Gen Intern Med ; 38(14): 3252-3256, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37407762

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Arts-and-humanities-based interventions are commonly implemented in medical education to promote well-being and mitigate the risk of burnout. However, mechanisms for achieving these effects remain uncertain within graduate medical education. The emerging field of the positive humanities offers a lens to examine whether and how arts-based interventions support well-being in internal medicine interns. AIM: Through program evaluation of this visual art workshop, we used a positive humanities framework to elucidate potential mechanisms by which arts-based curricula support well-being in internal medicine interns. SETTING: We launched the re-FRAME workshop at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in winter 2020. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty-six PGY-1 trainees from one internal medicine residency program. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: The 3-h re-FRAME workshop consisted of an introductory session on emotional processing followed by two previously described arts-based interventions. PROGRAM EVALUATION: Participants completed an immediate post-workshop survey (91% response rate) assessing attitudes towards the session. Analysis of open-ended survey data demonstrated 4 categories for supporting well-being among participants: becoming emotionally aware/expressive through art, pausing for reflection, practicing nonjudgmental observation, and normalizing experiences through socialization. DISCUSSION: Our project substantiated proposed mechanisms from the positive humanities for supporting well-being-including reflectiveness, skill acquisition, socialization, and expressiveness-among medical interns.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical , Humanities , Humans , Humanities/education , Curriculum , Education, Medical, Graduate , Burnout, Psychological
15.
Acad Pediatr ; 23(6): 1288-1294, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36997151

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Mastery learning orientation, conceptualized as a growth mindset, can be beneficial to learners in medical education and is supported by a program...s learning environment. Currently, there are no instruments which reliably assess the learning orientation of a graduate medical education program...s learning environment. OBJECTIVE: To explore the reliability and validity of the Graduate Medical Education Learning Environment Inventory (GME-LEI). METHODS: Leaders of the Education in Pediatrics Across the Continuum (EPAC) project revised Krupat...s Educational Climate Inventory to create the GME-LEI. We investigated the GME-LEI...s reliability and validity through confirmatory factor and parallel factor analyses and calculated Cronbach...s alpha for each subscale. We compared mean subscale scores between residents in traditional programs and the EPAC project. As EPAC is known to foster a mastery-focused learning orientation, we hypothesized differences detected between resident groups would strengthen the instrument...s validity. RESULTS: One hundred and twenty-seven pediatric residents completed the GME-LEI. The final 3-factor model was an acceptable fit to the data, and Cronbach...s alpha for each subscale was acceptable (Centrality: 0.87; Stress: 0.73; Support: 0.77). Mean scores on each subscale varied by program type (EPAC vs traditional) with EPAC residents reporting statistically significant higher scores in the Centrality of Learning subscale (2.03, SD 0.30, vs 1.79, SD 0.42; P.ß=.ß.023; scale of 1...4). CONCLUSIONS: The GME-LEI reliably measures 3 distinct aspects of the GME learning environment with respect to learning orientation. The GME-LEI may be used to help programs better monitor the learning environment and make changes to support mastery-oriented learning.


Subject(s)
Internship and Residency , Humans , Child , Reproducibility of Results , Education, Medical, Graduate/methods , Learning , Factor Analysis, Statistical
17.
Acad Med ; 98(2): 204-208, 2023 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36205490

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Program evaluation approaches that center the achievement of specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and time-bound goals are common in health professions education (HPE) but can be challenging to articulate when evaluating emergent programs. Principles-focused evaluation is an alternative approach to program evaluation that centers on adherence to guiding principles, not achievement of goals. The authors describe their innovative application of principles-focused evaluation to an emergent HPE program. APPROACH: The authors applied principles-focused evaluation to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Medical Education Collaboratory, a works-in-progress program for HPE scholarship. In September 2019, the authors drafted 3 guiding principles. In May 2021, they used feedback from Collaboratory attendees to revise the guiding principles: Advance Excellence , Build Bridges , and Cultivate Learning . OUTCOMES: In July 2021, the authors queried participants about the extent to which their experience with the Collaboratory adhered to the revised guiding principles. Twenty of the 38 Collaboratory participants (53%) responded to the survey. Regarding the guiding principle Advance Excellence , 9 respondents (45%) reported that the Collaboratory facilitated engagement in scholarly conversation only by a small extent, and 8 (40%) reported it facilitated professional growth only by a small extent. Although some respondents expressed positive regard for the high degree of rigor promoted by the Collaboratory, others felt discouraged because this degree of rigor seemed unachievable. Regarding the guiding principle Build Bridges , 19 (95%) reported the Collaboratory welcomed perspectives within the group. Regarding the guiding principle Cultivate Learning , 19 (95%) indicated the Collaboratory welcomed perspectives within the group and across disciplines, and garnered collaboration. NEXT STEPS: Next steps include improving adherence to the principle of Advancing Excellence , fostering a shared mental model of the Collaboratory's guiding principles, and applying a principles-focused approach to the evaluation of multi-site HPE programs.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical , Child , Humans , Program Evaluation , Learning , Curriculum , Health Occupations/education
19.
Acad Med ; 97(10): 1573-1574, 2022 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36198164

Subject(s)
Program Evaluation , Humans
20.
J Grad Med Educ ; 14(4): 466-474, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35991115

ABSTRACT

Background: Development of skills in diagnostic reasoning is paramount to the transition from novice to expert clinicians. Efforts to standardize approaches to diagnosis and treatment using clinical pathways are increasingly common. The effects of implementing pathways into systems of care during diagnostic education and practice among pediatric residents are not well described. Objective: To characterize pediatric residents' perceptions of the tradeoffs between clinical pathway use and diagnostic reasoning. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study from May to December 2019. Senior pediatric residents from a high-volume general pediatric inpatient service at an academic hospital participated in semi-structured interviews. We utilized a basic interpretive qualitative approach informed by a dual process diagnostic reasoning framework. Results: Nine residents recruited via email were interviewed. Residents reported using pathways when admitting patients and during teaching rounds. All residents described using pathways primarily as management tools for patients with a predetermined diagnosis, rather than as aids in formulating a diagnosis. As such, pathways primed residents to circumvent crucial steps of deliberate diagnostic reasoning. However, residents relied on bedside assessment to identify when patients are "not quite fitting the mold" of the current pathway diagnosis, facilitating recalibration of the diagnostic process. Conclusions: This study identifies important educational implications at the intersection of residents' cognitive diagnostic processes and use of clinical pathways. We highlight potential challenges clinical pathways pose for skill development in diagnostic reasoning by pediatric residents. We suggest opportunities for educators to leverage clinical pathways as a framework for development of these skills.


Subject(s)
Internship and Residency , Physicians , Teaching Rounds , Child , Clinical Competence , Critical Pathways , Humans , Physicians/psychology , Qualitative Research
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