加拿大医学毕业生的处方能力:医学院领导全国调查

Anne Holbrook, Simran Lohit, O. Chang, J. Deng, Dan Perri, Gousia Dhhar, Mitchell Levine, Jill Rudkowski, Heather McLeod, Kaitlynn Rigg, Victoria Telford, Anthony J Levinson
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摘要

临床药理学、治疗学和毒理学(CPT)知识不足以及处方质量差是对患者安全的威胁。我们之前对医学院教师进行的全国性调查发现,他们对医科学生毕业生安全处方的能力信心有限,并对全国性处方能力评估感兴趣。鉴于 COVID-19 大流行的相关限制带来的面对面挑战,我们旨在重新评估意见,并衡量对电子学习资源和评估的兴趣。通过公开资料,我们邀请了来自加拿大所有 17 所医学院校的医学院校领导(包括院长、副院长以及实习、住院医师培训和电子学习的项目主任)参与横向调查。调查问题经过多轮测试后最终确定,并进行了描述性分析。在收到的 1448 份邀请函中,有 411 人(28.4%)阅读了调查问卷,其中 278 人(67.6%)至少完成了一个调查问题,所有学校均有代表参与。虽然 90% 以上的受访者同意医学生应达到处方能力的最低标准,但只有 17 人(7.9%)能证明自己的学校达到了 CPT 的目标,而且许多人对自己或其他学校的应届毕业生的处方能力非常担忧。鉴于当地缺乏 CPT 电子课程资源,人们对 CPT 的全国性在线课程和评估产生了浓厚的兴趣。我们的全国调查结果表明,医学学员的处方能力一直存在不足,这也为在医学院开设全国性在线 CPT 课程和进行评估提供了强有力的支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prescribing Competence of Canadian Medical Graduates: National Survey of Medical School Leaders
Suboptimal knowledge of clinical pharmacology, therapeutics, and toxicology (CPT) and poor-quality prescribing are threats to patient safety. Our previous national survey of medical faculty identified limited confidence in medical student graduates’ ability to safely prescribe, as well as an interest in a national prescribing competence assessment. Given the in-person challenges posed by the restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, we aimed to re-evaluate opinions and gauge the interest in e-learning resources and assessments. Using public sources, a sampling frame of medical school leaders from all 17 Canadian medical schools, including deans, vice-deans, and program directors for clerkship, residency, and e-learning, were invited to participate in a cross-sectional survey. Survey questions were finalized after several rounds of testing, and analyses were descriptive. Of 1448 invitations, 411 (28.4%) individuals reviewed the survey, and, among them, 278 (67.6%) completed at least one survey question, with representation from all schools. While more than 90% of respondents agreed that medical students should meet a minimum standard of prescribing competence, only 17 (7.9%) could vouch for their school meeting objectives in CPT, and many had significant concerns about their own or other schools’ recent graduate prescribing abilities. Given the lack of local CPT e-curricula resources, there was strong interest in a national online course and assessment in CPT. Our national survey results suggest an ongoing inadequacy of medical trainees’ prescribing competence, and also provide a strong endorsement for both a national online CPT course and assessment during medical school.
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