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4.
Acad Emerg Med ; 29(12): 1414-1421, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36268814

ABSTRACT

In June 2022, the United States Supreme Court decision Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization overturned Roe v. Wade, removing almost 50 years of precedent and enabling the imposition of a wide range of state-level restrictions on abortion access. Historical data from the United States and internationally demonstrate that the removal of safe abortion options will increase complications and the health risks to pregnant patients. Because the emergency department is a critical access point for reproductive health care, emergency clinicians must be prepared for the policy, clinical, educational, and legal implications of this change. The goal of this paper, therefore, is to describe the impact of the reversal of Roe v. Wade on health equity and reproductive justice, the provision of emergency care education and training, and the specific legal and reproductive consequences for emergency clinicians. Finally, we conclude with specific recommended policy and advocacy responses for emergency medicine clinicians.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Legal , Emergency Medicine , Pregnancy , United States , Female , Humans , Supreme Court Decisions , Policy
5.
J Surg Educ ; 79(6): e273-e284, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36283921

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to utilize interprofessional trauma team training to teach procedural-based skills, teamwork, and assess the impact on the procedural comfort and interprofessional collaboration. DESIGN: Interdisciplinary skills sessions were created to focus on chest tube placement and advanced ultrasound techniques. Chest tube sessions were taught by senior general surgery (GS) residents and faculty. Ultrasound sessions were taught by emergency medicine (EM) fellows and faculty. Mock trauma simulations for EM and GS residents and EM nurses, were developed to also focus on improving interprofessional trauma-bay collaboration. Sessions were held throughout the year for 2 consecutive academic years. After completing skills sessions and trauma scenarios, participants were surveyed on skill comfort, session utility, and willingness to collaborate with the other specialty. Likert scale responses were analyzed by specialty cohort and in aggregate. Free-text feedback responses were analyzed for common themes. SETTING: Large, tertiary, urban academic medical center PARTICIPANTS: Forty seven EM residents and 32 GS residents completed instructional chest tube and ultrasound simulations, respectively. Twenty two EM residents, 24 GS residents, and 29 EM nurses participated in interprofessional trauma simulations. RESULTS: For chest tube placement: 71% of EM residents reported feeling uncomfortable with the procedure prior to the session, with 100% reporting improved confidence afterwards. Seventy percent stated the model was realistic. One hundred percent thought it improved their procedural skills. All participants thought it was worthwhile, should be offered again in future years, and planned to incorporate what they learned in their future practice. For the ultrasound sessions: 61% of GS residents felt uncomfortable with the Focused Assessment with Sonography in Trauma prior to the simulation. Ninety four percent reported the improved skill and confidence, and felt the model was realistic. All participants felt sessions were worthwhile, should be offered again, and planned to incorporate what they learned in their future practice. For trauma simulations: 97% of participants felt scenarios were realistic and clinically relevant and planned to incorporate lessons learned in their future clinical practice. All participants thought participation was worthwhile. Ninety seven percent thought it improved their confidence with trauma clinical management and 56% reported it improved their skills. Many participants reported they appreciated learning from the other specialty's perspective, with greater than 95% of all participants reporting improved comfort and willingness to collaborate across disciplines when caring for future trauma patients. All participants requested the simulation sessions continue in future academic years. CONCLUSION: Interprofessional trauma simulation sessions can harness the unique skill sets of different disciplines to teach procedural-based skills and improve interprofessional collaboration within the trauma bay.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine , Internship and Residency , Simulation Training , Humans , Emergency Medicine/education , Clinical Competence
7.
Global Surg Educ ; 1(1): 56, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38013715

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Surgical consultation and the joint management of trauma patients is a common scenario in the emergency department. The goal of this study was to utilize interprofessional trauma team training to understand the role of simulation and its impact on the overall culture of trauma-related care. Methods: Interdisciplinary trauma simulation scenarios were completed by 12 groups of emergency medicine residents, general surgery residents, and emergency medicine nurses across two academic years. Following each simulation, a debriefing session was held to reflect on the scenario, focusing on team interactions. Debriefing sessions were audio-recorded, transcribed, deidentified, and independently, inductively coded by two members of the research team. Using the constant comparative method, a codebook was developed and refined until interrater reliability was confirmed with a kappa of > 0.9. Codes were organized into higher level themes. Results: There were 72 participants, including 23 general surgery residents, 19 emergency medicine residents, and 30 emergency medicine nurses. 214 primary codes were collapsed into 29 coding categories, with 6 emerging themes. Pre-trauma bay impact describes how interactions prior to the trauma scenario can impact how team members communicate, trust one another, and ultimately care for the patient. Role and team identity explores the importance of one knowing their individual role in the trauma bay and how it impacts overall team identity. Resource allocation describes the balance of having appropriate resources to efficiently care for patients while not negatively impacting crowd control or role identity. Impact of the simulation experience highlights the impact of the lower stakes simulation scenario on learning and reflection as well as concerns with simulation fidelity. Trauma leader traits and actions outlines inherent traits and learned actions of trauma leaders that impact how the trauma scenario unfolds. Interprofessional team performance describes the overall performance of the trauma team, including but not limited to the type of communication used, teamwork behaviors, and transition of care of the patient. Conclusions: Interdisciplinary trauma simulations and structured debriefing sessions provide insights into team dynamics and interprofessional relationships. Simulations and debriefing sessions can promote understanding, respect, and familiarity of team members' roles; recognition of key characteristics of high functioning leaders and teams; and discovery of conflict mitigating strategies for future interdisciplinary team improvement. Simulation sessions allow implementation of quality improvement measures and communication and leadership strategy practice in a safe, collaborative learning environment. The lessons learned from these sessions can encourage participants to reexamine how they interact and function as a team within the real-life trauma bay.

8.
J Med Educ Curric Dev ; 8: 23821205211020760, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34263055

ABSTRACT

Virtual meeting platforms, such as Zoom, have become essential to medical education during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. However, many medical educators do not have experience planning or leading these sessions. Despite the prevalence of Zoom learning, there has been little published on best practices. In this article we describe best practices for using Zoom for remote learning, acknowledging technical considerations, and recommending workflows for designing and implementing virtual sessions. Furthermore, we discuss the important role of cognitive learning theory and how to incorporate these key pedagogical insights into a successful virtual session. While eventually in-person classrooms will open, virtual teaching will remain a component of medical education. If we utilize these inventive tools creatively and functionally, then virtual learning can augment and elevate the practice of medical education.

9.
Cureus ; 13(5): e14965, 2021 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33996338

ABSTRACT

In situ simulation (ISS) put simulation training directly into the clinical practice environment. Although ISS creates opportunities to identify latent system threats, understand culture, and improve team dynamics, there are limited resources for medical educators to guide the development and implementation of ISS at academic (or community-based) emergency departments (EDs). We describe the implementation of ISS in a high-volume urban ED to help educators understand the requirements and limitations of successful program design. During an academic year, 66 individual learners participated in at least one of our 22 training sessions, a cohort that included 37 nurses, 17 physicians, eight physician assistants, and four allied health professionals. Feedback from these participants and case facilitators informed our iterative process of review and development of program guidelines and best practices. We share these key technical points and the themes we found to be essential to the successful implementation of an ISS program: consideration of session timing, participant buy-in, flexibility, and threats to professional identity. Overall, our report demonstrates the feasibility of implementing an ISS program in a high-volume urban ED and provides medical educators with a guide for creating an ISS program for interprofessional education.

10.
West J Emerg Med ; 22(2): 301-307, 2021 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33856316

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Academic emergency physicians must find ways to teach residents, medical students, and advanced practice providers amidst the myriad demands on their time during clinical shifts. In this study, we sought to characterize in detail what types of teaching occurred, how often they occurred, and how attending teaching styles differed at one academic emergency department (ED). METHODS: We conducted this observational study in a large, urban, quaternary care, academic Level I trauma center with an emergency medicine (EM) residency. The on-shift activities of EM attending physicians (attendings) were observed and recorded over 42 hours by a fourth-year EM resident with co-observations by an EM education fellow. Teaching categories were identified, developed iteratively, and validated by the study team. We then characterized the distribution of teaching activities during shifts through the coding of attending activities every 30 seconds during observations. Teaching archetypes were then developed through the synthesis of notes taken during observations. RESULTS: Attendings spent a mean of 25% (standard deviation 7%) of their time engaging in teaching activities during shifts. Of this teaching time 36% consisted of explicit instruction, while the remaining 64% of teaching occurred implicitly through the discussion of cases with learners. The time distribution of on-shift activities varied greatly between attendings, but three archetypes emerged for how attendings coupled patient care and teaching: "in-series"; "in-parallel modeling"; and "in-parallel supervision." CONCLUSIONS: Teaching in this academic ED took many forms, most of which arose organically from patient care. The majority of on-shift teaching occurred through implicit means, rather than explicit instruction. Attendings also spent their time in markedly different ways and embodied distinct teaching archetypes. The impact of this variability on both educational and patient care outcomes warrants further study.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Teaching/organization & administration , Emergency Medicine/education , Emergency Medicine/methods , Hospitals, Teaching , Humans , Internship and Residency/methods , Students, Medical , Time Factors
11.
Am J Emerg Med ; 39: 254.e1-254.e3, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32631770

ABSTRACT

As the 2019 coronavirus pandemic has unfolded, an increasing number of atypical presentations of COVID-19 have been reported. As patients with COVID-19 often present to emergency departments for initial care, it is important that emergency clinicians are familiar with these atypical presentations in order to prevent disease transmission. We present a case of a 21-year-old woman diagnosed in our ED with COVID-19 associated parotitis and review the epidemiology and management of parotitis. We discuss the importance of considering COVID-19 in the differential of parotitis and other viral-associated syndromes and emphasize the importance of donning personal protective equipment during the initial evaluation.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/complications , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Infection Control/methods , Parotitis/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Parotitis/prevention & control , Parotitis/virology , Personal Protective Equipment , Young Adult
12.
West J Emerg Med ; 21(6): 88-92, 2020 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33052815

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Emergency clinicians on the frontline of the coronavirus pandemic experience a range of emotions including anxiety, fear, and grief. Debriefing can help clinicians process these emotions, but the coronavirus pandemic makes it difficult to create a physically and psychologically safe space in the emergency department (ED) to perform this intervention. In response, we piloted a video-based debriefing program to support emergency clinician well-being. We report the details of our program and results of our evaluation of its acceptability and perceived value to emergency clinicians during the pandemic. METHODS: ED attending physicians, resident physicians, and non-physician practitioners (NPP) at our quaternary-care academic medical center were invited to participate in role-based, weekly one-hour facilitated debriefings using Zoom. ED attendings with experience in debriefing led each session and used an explorative approach that focused on empathy and normalizing reactions. At the end of the pilot, we distributed to participants an anonymous 10-point survey that included multiple-answer questions and visual analogue scales. RESULTS: We completed 18 debriefings with 68 unique participants (29 attending physicians, 6 resident physicians, and 33 NPPs. A total of 76% of participants responded to our survey and 77% of respondents participated in at least two debriefings. Emergency clinicians reported that the most common reasons to participate in the debriefings were "to enhance my sense of community and connection" (81%) followed by "to support colleagues" (75%). Debriefing with members of the same role group (92%) and the Zoom platform (81%) were considered to be helpful aspects of the debriefing structure. Although emergency clinicians found these sessions to be useful (78.8 +/- 17.6) interquartile range: 73-89), NPPs were less comfortable speaking up (58.5 +/- 23.6) than attending physicians (77.8 +/- 25.0) (p = < 0.008). CONCLUSION: Emergency clinicians participating in a video-based debriefing program during the coronavirus pandemic found it to be an acceptable and useful approach to support emotional well-being. Our program provided participants with a platform to support each other and maintain a sense of community and connection. Other EDs should consider implementing a debriefing program to safeguard the emotional well-being of their emergency clinician workforce.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Emergency Service, Hospital , Feedback , Nurse Practitioners/psychology , Occupational Stress/therapy , Physicians/psychology , Videoconferencing , Attitude of Health Personnel , Burnout, Professional/prevention & control , Health Promotion/methods , Humans , Occupational Stress/psychology , Resilience, Psychological , SARS-CoV-2 , Surveys and Questionnaires
13.
West J Emerg Med ; 21(4): 974-977, 2020 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32726272

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Adverse effects of administrative burden on emergency physicians have been described previously, but the impact of electronic health record documentation by academic emergency attendings on resident education is not known. In this observational study of a quaternary care, academic emergency department, we sought to assess whether the amount of time attending physicians spent on documentation affected the amount of time they spent teaching. METHODS: A fourth-year emergency medicine (EM) resident observed 10 attending physicians over 42 hours during 11 shifts, recording their activities every 30 seconds. Activity categories were developed iteratively by the study team and validated through co-observation by an EM education fellow with a kappa of 0.89. We used regression analysis to assess the relationship between time spent documenting and time spent teaching, as well as the relationship between these two activities and all other attending activity categories. RESULTS: Results demonstrate that time spent documenting was significantly and specifically associated with less time spent teaching, controlling for patient arrivals per hour; every minute spent on documentation was associated with 0.48 fewer minutes spent teaching (p<0.05). Further, documentation time was not strongly associated with time spent on any other activity including patient care, nor did any other activity significantly predict teaching time. CONCLUSION: Findings suggest that academic attendings may face a trade-off between their documentation and teaching duties. Further study is needed to explore how administrative expectations placed on academic emergency physicians might interfere with trainee education.


Subject(s)
Documentation/statistics & numerical data , Emergency Medicine/education , Internship and Residency , Teaching , Emergency Medicine/methods , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Internship and Residency/methods , Internship and Residency/standards , Massachusetts , Needs Assessment , Teaching/organization & administration , Teaching/statistics & numerical data
14.
AEM Educ Train ; 4(2): 154-157, 2020 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32313862

ABSTRACT

Physician assistants (PAs) are expanding their role in academic emergency departments (EDs). There are no published models for how to integrate PAs into departmental educational activities, scholarship, and operations outside of a PA residency approach. We created a professional development program for PAs that would provide them with opportunities to integrate into all aspects of our department mission and provide them with a forum for personal growth and ongoing education. The program provides PAs with resources including protected time and mentorship to become a content expert in an academic area of interest. We review our 5-year experience creating and implementing this program, which has grown from six PAs in 2013 to 24 PAs in 2018. These PAs now have formal roles in five of our eight divisions, participating in education, administrative, and research activities. The retention rate for PAs in this program is 90.2% versus 85.7% for PAs at our department who are not in the program. Our experience and results demonstrate the value of investing in the professional development and continued education of PAs at an academic ED versus the traditional model of service and the potential for integration into all aspects of an academic ED's mission.

16.
AEM Educ Train ; 3(2): 156-162, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31008427

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The introduction of video laryngoscopy (VL) may impact emergency medicine (EM) residents' intubation practices. METHODS: We analyzed 14,313 intubations from 11 EM training sites, July 1, 2002, to December 31, 2012, assessing the likelihood of first-attempt success and likelihood of having a second attempt, by rank and device. We determined whether direct laryngoscopy (DL) first-attempt success decreased as VL became more prevalent using a logistic regression model with proportion of encounters initiated with VL at that center in the prior 90 and 365 days as predictors of DL first-attempt success. RESULTS: First-attempt success by PGY-1s was 71% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 63% to 78%); PGY-2s, 82% (95% CI = 78% to 86%); and PGY-3+, 89% (95% CI = 85% to 92%). Residents' first-attempt success rate was higher with the C-MAC video laryngoscope (C-MAC) versus DL, 92% versus 84% (risk difference [RD] = 8%, 95% CI = 4% to 11%), but there was no statistical difference between the GlideScope video laryngoscope (GVL) and DL, 80% versus 84% (RD = -4%, 95% CI = -10% to 1%). PGY-1s were more likely to have a second intubation attempt after first-attempt failure with VL versus DL: 32% versus 18% (RD = 14%, 95% CI = 5% to 23%). DL first-attempt success rates did not decrease as VL became more prevalent. CONCLUSIONS: First-attempt success increases with training. Interns are more likely to have a second attempt when using VL. The C-MAC may be associated with increased first-attempt success for EM residents compared with DL or GVL. The increasing prevalence of VL is not accompanied by a decrease in DL success.

17.
J Pain Symptom Manage ; 57(5): 944-951, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30776539

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Heart failure (HF) is associated with symptom exacerbations and risk of mortality after an emergency department (ED) visit. Although emergency physicians (EPs) treat symptoms of HF, often the opportunity to connect with palliative care is missed. The "surprise question" (SQ) "Would you be surprised if this patient died in the next 12 months?" is a simple tool to identify patients at risk for 12-month mortality. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to assess the accuracy of the SQ when used by EPs to assess patients with HF. METHODS: We conducted a prospective cohort study in which clinicians applied the SQ to patients presenting to the ED with symptoms of HF. Chart review and review of death records were completed. The primary outcome was accuracy of the surprise question to predict 12-month mortality. A univariate analysis for potential predictors of 12-month mortality was performed. RESULTS: During the study period, 199 patients were identified, and complete data were available for 97% of observations (n = 193). The one-year mortality was 29%. EPs reported that "they would not be surprised" if the patient died within the next 12 months in 53% of cases. 42.7% of these patients died within 12 months compared to 13.3% in the "would be surprised" group. There was a strong association with death in the "not surprised" group (odds ratio 4.85, 95% CI 2.34-9.98, P < 0.0001). The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the SQ were 78.6%, 56.9%, 42.7%, and 86.7%, respectively, with c-statistic = 0.68. CONCLUSION: The SQ screening tool can assist ED providers in identifying HF patients that would benefit from early palliative care involvement.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services/methods , Emergency Service, Hospital , Heart Failure/diagnosis , Palliative Care/methods , Aged , Heart Failure/mortality , Heart Failure/therapy , Humans , Prognosis , Prospective Studies
18.
J Med Toxicol ; 14(3): 212-217, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29926389

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Twitter-based chat groups (tweetchats) structured as virtual journal clubs have been demonstrated to provide value to learners. In order to promote topics in medical toxicology, we developed the #firesidetox tweetchat as a virtual journal club to discuss and disseminate topics in medical toxicology. METHODS: A group of medical toxicologists from the American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT) Public Affairs Committee and editorial board of the Journal of Medical Toxicology (JMT) developed a quarterly one hour tweetchat featuring JMT manuscripts. We gathered basic twittergraphics and used a healthcare hashtag aggregator to measure the number of impressions, participants, and tweets per tweetchat session. A qualitative analysis of important themes from #firesidetox was also completed. RESULTS: During five tweetchats over 12 months, we attracted a mean of 23 participants generating a mean of 150 tweets per #firesidetox tweetchat. Tweets generated a mean of 329,200 impressions (unique user views): these impressions grew by 300% from the first through fifth #firesidetox. The majority of participants self-identified as medical toxicologists or physician learners. Although most were from the USA, participants also came from Australia, Poland, and Qatar. Most tweets centered on medical education and 7.9% tweets were learner-driven or questions asking for a medical toxicologist expert opinion. CONCLUSION: The #firesidetox attracted a diverse group of toxicologists, learners, and members of the public in a virtual journal club setting. The increasing number of impressions, participants, and tweets during #firesidetox demonstrates the tweetchat model to discuss pertinent toxicology topics is feasible and well received among its participants.


Subject(s)
Information Dissemination/methods , Social Media , Toxicology , Internet , Physicians
19.
Clin Pract Cases Emerg Med ; 1(2): 150-151, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29849390
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