异步住院医师课程教学阿片类药物使用障碍。

PRiMER (Leawood, Kan.) Pub Date : 2025-09-12 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.22454/PRiMER.2025.758007
David J Johnson, Julienne K Kirk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)仍然是一个重要的公共卫生问题,初级保健医生对其识别和治疗至关重要。然而,许多住院医师项目缺乏对OUD循证行为和药理学方法的结构化培训。本研究评估了异步视频OUD课程对家庭医学一年级住院医师知识习得的影响。方法:我们采用准实验设计来评估从MedEdPORTAL改编的OUD课程的可行性和短期影响。21名第一年住院医生在2周的行为健康轮转期间完成了课程,并使用10个问题的前测和20个问题的后测进行了评估。九名三年级住院医生组成的对照组只完成了后测。所有评估均以电子方式进行。由于匿名回复收集,测试前和测试后的分数无法匹配。我们使用Mann-Whitney U检验来比较各组之间的后测分数和干预组内的前后测分数。我们还计算了效应量。结果:完成课程的住院医师表现出从测试前(中位数=7.0)到测试后(中位数=17.0)的知识显著增加,U=345.0, Pr=0.62)表明课程后知识有了实质性的收获。结论:异步OUD课程显著提高了住院医师的知识水平,并且与对照组的老年住院医师的测试后表现相当,表明该课程与传统培训方法相比具有非劣势性,并支持该课程作为可扩展教育模式的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Teaching Opioid Use Disorder With an Asynchronous Residency Curriculum.

Introduction: Opioid use disorder (OUD) remains a critical public health concern, and primary care physicians are essential to its identification and treatment. However, many residency programs lack structured training in evidence-based behavioral and pharmacologic approaches to OUD. This study evaluated the impact of an asynchronous, video-based OUD curriculum on knowledge acquisition among first-year family medicine residents.

Methods: We used a quasi-experimental design to assess the feasibility and short-term impact of an OUD curriculum adapted from MedEdPORTAL. Twenty first-year residents completed the curriculum during a 2-week behavioral health rotation and were assessed using a 10-question pretest and a 20-question posttest. A control group of nine third-year residents completed only the posttest. All assessments were administered electronically. Due to anonymous response collection, pre- and posttest scores could not be matched. We used Mann-Whitney U tests to compare posttest scores between groups and pre- versus posttest scores within the intervention group. We also calculated effect sizes.

Results: Residents who completed the curriculum demonstrated a significant increase in knowledge from pretest (median=7.0) to posttest (median=17.0), U=345.0, P<.001. A large effect size (r=0.62) indicated a substantial gain in knowledge following the curriculum.

Conclusions: An asynchronous OUD curriculum significantly improved resident knowledge and demonstrated comparable posttest performance to a control group of senior residents, suggesting noninferiority to traditional training approaches and supporting the curriculum's potential as a scalable educational model.

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