{"title":"Evaluation of a National Addiction Medicine Curriculum for Primary Care Physicians","authors":"Matthew R. Martin, Randi G Sokol","doi":"10.1370/afm.21.s1.4029","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"CONTEXT: Substance use disorders (SUDs) are a leading cause of death, disability, and disease in the U.S. Primary care physicians are well-positioned to address SUD treatment gap, increase access, destigmatize addiction; a 2015 study of family medicine residency programs suggests less than 30% have an addiction medicine curriculum. Lack of faculty expertise was the most commonly cited barrier to not having a curriculum. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate impact of a national addiction medicine curriculum on 25 residency programs. DESIGN/ANALYSIS: We conducted 4 1-hour-long focus groups with residents who participated in the curriculum and four one-hour-long focus groups with faculty members who taught the curriculum. We used software and qualitative thematic analysis to analyze recordings. SETTING: Family medicine residency programs. POP STUDIED: Sites represented diverse settings (rural and urban, academic and community-based) and addiction backgrounds (ranging from no prior addiction curriculum to robust prior addiction curriculum) and included 14 states from across the country (CA, WA, PA, NV, MO, CO, NC, IL, MN, KY, IL, MI, TX, MD). INTERVENTION: We exposed residents to competency-based addiction medicine curriculum, a collection of 12 on-line learning modules and 12 in-person classroom sessions. Modules included quizzes, reflections, cases, demo videos. We exposed faculty to 12-month faculty development series, with faculty website, teacher’s guide for classroom sessions, peer support & learning. OUTCOMES: Six faculty focus group questions measuring impact on resident patient care, precepting, other faculty members, recommendations for improvement, innovations, and overall value. Six resident focus group questions measuring perception of learning format, changes in patient care, precepting changes, professional impact, recommendations for improvement, and overall value. RESULTS: Curriculum enriched resident and faculty knowledge across all topics, changed attitudes in viewing addiction as a chronic disease and within the scope of family medicine practice, increased confidence, and decreased stigma. Nurtured behavior change, enhancing communication and assessment skills and encouraging collaboration across disciplines. Participants valued flipped-classroom approach, videos, cases, role plays, teacher’s guides, and 1-pg summaries. CONCLUSION: The curriculum provides a comprehensive, ready-made, evidenced-based platform for training residents and faculty in SUDs.","PeriodicalId":47994,"journal":{"name":"Education and Training","volume":"6 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Education and Training","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.21.s1.4029","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
CONTEXT: Substance use disorders (SUDs) are a leading cause of death, disability, and disease in the U.S. Primary care physicians are well-positioned to address SUD treatment gap, increase access, destigmatize addiction; a 2015 study of family medicine residency programs suggests less than 30% have an addiction medicine curriculum. Lack of faculty expertise was the most commonly cited barrier to not having a curriculum. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate impact of a national addiction medicine curriculum on 25 residency programs. DESIGN/ANALYSIS: We conducted 4 1-hour-long focus groups with residents who participated in the curriculum and four one-hour-long focus groups with faculty members who taught the curriculum. We used software and qualitative thematic analysis to analyze recordings. SETTING: Family medicine residency programs. POP STUDIED: Sites represented diverse settings (rural and urban, academic and community-based) and addiction backgrounds (ranging from no prior addiction curriculum to robust prior addiction curriculum) and included 14 states from across the country (CA, WA, PA, NV, MO, CO, NC, IL, MN, KY, IL, MI, TX, MD). INTERVENTION: We exposed residents to competency-based addiction medicine curriculum, a collection of 12 on-line learning modules and 12 in-person classroom sessions. Modules included quizzes, reflections, cases, demo videos. We exposed faculty to 12-month faculty development series, with faculty website, teacher’s guide for classroom sessions, peer support & learning. OUTCOMES: Six faculty focus group questions measuring impact on resident patient care, precepting, other faculty members, recommendations for improvement, innovations, and overall value. Six resident focus group questions measuring perception of learning format, changes in patient care, precepting changes, professional impact, recommendations for improvement, and overall value. RESULTS: Curriculum enriched resident and faculty knowledge across all topics, changed attitudes in viewing addiction as a chronic disease and within the scope of family medicine practice, increased confidence, and decreased stigma. Nurtured behavior change, enhancing communication and assessment skills and encouraging collaboration across disciplines. Participants valued flipped-classroom approach, videos, cases, role plays, teacher’s guides, and 1-pg summaries. CONCLUSION: The curriculum provides a comprehensive, ready-made, evidenced-based platform for training residents and faculty in SUDs.
期刊介绍:
Education + Training addresses the increasingly complex relationships between education, training and employment and the impact of these relationships on national and global labour markets. The journal gives specific consideration to young people, looking at how the transition from school/college to employment is achieved and how the nature of partnerships between the worlds of education and work continues to evolve. The journal explores vocationalism in learning and efforts to address employability within the curriculum, together with coverage of innovative themes and initiatives within vocational education and training. The journal is read by policy makers, educators and academics working in a wide range of fields including education, learning and skills development, enterprise and entrepreneurship education and training, induction and career development. Coverage: Managing the transition from school/college to work New initiatives in post 16 vocational education and training Education-Business partnerships and collaboration Links between education and industry The graduate labour market Work experience and placements The recruitment, induction and development of school leavers and graduates Young person employability and career development E learning in further and higher education Research news Reviews of recent publications.