新颖的 "培训培训师 "急诊科住院医师护理点超声课程:可行性研究。

Spartan medical research journal Pub Date : 2020-01-30
Nikolai Butki, Jereme Long, Andrew Butki, William Corser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:为了更好地满足由密歇根州 16 个社区急诊医学(EM)住院医师培训项目组成的地理位置分散的联盟的医学研究生教育学习需求,我们设计了一种新颖的多地点 "培训培训师 "护理点超声(POCUS)培训课程。本研究的具体目的是探讨使用对超声技术一无所知的志愿急诊科医生作为 POCUS 课程讲师的可行性。此外,作者还评估了在多个地点讲授 POCUS 课程的有效性和一致性,以提高急诊科住院医师的超声波知识和技能:方法:在最初的课程中,主讲教师与新手教师一起进行了两小时的集中授课。随后为急诊科住院医师重复进行了四小时的课程,由上述新手讲师提供实践指导。住院医师在课程前和课程后分别接受了 10 项和 20 项知识测试,以衡量教学模式的有效性。课程结束后,对参加课程的住院医师进行了满意度调查,并对担任指导教师的志愿急诊科医生进行了开放式定性调查:来自 11 个不同住院医师培训项目的 42 名急诊科住院医师参加了三门课程中的一门。在对培训前和培训后测试的人数差异进行调整后,总样本住院医师学员中有 35 人(87.5%)的分数从测试前到测试后按比例上升,另有 5 人(11.9%)保持了课程前的分数水平,只有 2 人(4.8%)的分数在课程后有所下降。此外,居民学员对课程后的总结评估反应良好,平均分为 4.8 分(0-5 分李克特量表),显示出对课程的总体满意度。在对讲师进行的单独定性调查中,评论一致认为志愿急救医生从中受益:对这一新颖模式的评估支持了 "培训培训师 "计划的可行性。它证明了在 POCUS 培训课程中可以实施 "培训培训师 "模式。尽管样本量较小,但我们的结果显示,大多数参与培训的住院医师在测试前和测试后的得分都有所提高。该模式为急诊科住院医师培训项目的教育者提供了一个额外的选择,他们可以在多个 GME 环境中开发 POCUS 培训课程时加以考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A Novel 'Train the Trainer' Emergency Medicine Resident Point-of-Care Ultrasound Course: A Feasibility Study.

A Novel 'Train the Trainer' Emergency Medicine Resident Point-of-Care Ultrasound Course: A Feasibility Study.

A Novel 'Train the Trainer' Emergency Medicine Resident Point-of-Care Ultrasound Course: A Feasibility Study.

Context: A novel multi-site 'train the trainer' point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) training course was designed to better meet the graduate medical education learning needs of a geographically dispersed consortium of 16 community-based Michigan emergency medicine (EM) residency programs. The specific aim of this study was to explore the feasibility of using volunteer EM physicians who were novices with ultrasound techniques as instructors for a POCUS course. Additionally, the authors evaluated the effectiveness and consistency of a POCUS course delivered over multiple sites to enhance EM residents' ultrasound knowledge and skill acquisition.

Methods: For the initial session, the lead instructor conducted a focused two-hour course with the novice instructors. A subsequent four-hour session was then repeated for EM residents whereby the aforementioned novice instructors provided the hands-on instruction. The residents were given 10-item pre- and 20-item post-course knowledge tests to gauge the effectiveness of the instruction model. After the course, a satisfaction survey was administered to the resident participants and a qualitative open-ended survey to the volunteer EM physicians who served as instructors.

Results: Forty-two EM residents from 11 different residency programs attended at one of the three courses that were offered. After adjustments for size differences in the pre- and post-training tests, 35 (87.5%) of total sample resident learners' scores proportionately increased from pre- to post-test scores, with five (11.9%) other residents maintaining their pre-course score levels and only two (4.8%) residents experienced a post-score decline. In addition, resident participants responded favorably to a post-course summary evaluation with an average response of 4.8 (0-5 Likert scale) demonstrating overall satisfaction with the course. In the separate qualitative survey given to instructors, comments consistently conveyed a perceived benefit for the volunteer EM physicians.

Conclusions: The evaluation of this novel model supports the feasibility of the 'train the trainer' program. It provides a proof of principle that train the trainer model can be implemented for POCUS training courses. Despite the small sample size, our results show an increase in the pre- to post-test scores among most participating residents. This model provides an additional option for EM residency program educators to consider when developing their POCUS training courses across multiple GME settings.

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