利用居民的实践为基础的调查,以提高研究素养:证据的周到阅读进入临床设置(T-RECS)倡议。

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Emmagene Worley, Edward H Suh, Liliya Abrukin, Michael DeFilippo, Jonathan J Kamler, Mahesh Polavarapu, Peter C Wyer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究素养是所有临床医生的重要能力,但培养住院医生对此的热情是困难的。在一个学术急诊医学(EM)住院医师项目中,我们设计了一个创新项目,帮助住院医师在社区实践中提高读写技能,并使用研究文献来解决临床问题。方法:一个由六名教师组成的核心团队对住院医生进行了调查,以评估他们对循证医学(EBM)的基本经验和对医学文献的参与程度。感兴趣的住院医生加入了一个迭代的课程开发过程,该过程借鉴了以前的循证医学教学经验和扫盲理论。我们开发了一种半结构化的方法,优先使用临床适用性的参考框架而不是研究方法。我们每年举行三次90-120分钟的会议,作为定期住院医师教学会议的一部分;会议后的定量和定性评价被用来调整随后的教学,以完善方法。结果:在研究期间进行的9次培训中,平均有48名住院医生参加了EM培训计划。在基线时,居民在医学院期间对循证医学的接触程度很高(94%的受访者),但在阅读医学文献(25%)或将研究应用于实践(10%)方面的信心较低。相反,他们报告说,这个新颖的项目使他们具备了解读文学作品的技能,并导致了集体实践的改进。我们发现,当实习医生根据自己的培训经验提出的问题来主持课程时,他们的参与度最高。其他积极因素包括居民之间进行了良好的讨论,讨论了有关数据驱动的当地实践模式审查的问题,并处理了免费开放医学教育(FOAMed)来源的调查结果。最初阶段需要大量的团队努力来设计试点会议,但后来的会议是根据居民询问的轨迹开发的,使用最低限度的结构化教师共识过程,需要少于12个教师小时的承诺。结论:一个以住院医师基于实践的研究文献查询为中心的创新项目似乎可以提高学习者对研究素养发展的热情。需要进一步的发展来验证这种方法的总体有效性和普遍性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Harnessing Residents' Practice-based Inquiries to Enhance Research Literacy: The Thoughtful Reading of Evidence into Clinical Settings (T-RECS) Initiative.

Introduction: Research literacy is an important competency for all clinicians, but developing resident enthusiasm for it is difficult. At one academic emergency medicine (EM) residency program, we designed an innovative program to help residents improve literacy skills within a community of practice and use research literature to address clinical problems.

Methods: A six-member faculty core team surveyed residents to assess their baseline experience with evidence-based medicine (EBM) and level of engagement with the medical literature. Interested residents joined an iterative curriculum development process that drew on previous EBM pedagogical experience and literacy theory. We developed a semi-structured approach that prioritizes using the reference frame of clinical applicability rather than research methodology. We held 90-120 minute sessions three times a year as part of the regular residency didactic conference; post-session evaluations with quantitative and qualitative elements were used to adjust subsequent didactics to refine the approach.

Results: An average of 48 residents were in the EM training program during the nine sessions conducted during the study period. At baseline, residents had a high degree of exposure to EBM during medical school (94% of respondents) but low confidence in reading the medical literature (25%) or applying research to practice (10%). In contrast, they reported the novel program equipped them with skills to interpret literature and led to collective practice improvement. We found engagement was highest when residents led sessions based on inquiries that emerged out of their own training experience. Other positive factors included well-facilitated discussions between residents, relating questions to data-driven review of local practice patterns and addressing findings from free open access medical education (FOAMed) sources. The initial stages required significant team effort to design the pilot sessions, but later sessions were developed following the trajectory of resident inquiries using a minimally structured faculty consensus process and required less than 12 total faculty hours of commitment.

Conclusion: An innovative program centered on residents' practice-based queries of research literature appears to enhance learner enthusiasm for development of research literacy. Further development is needed to validate the overall effectiveness and generalizability of this approach.

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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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