麻醉学期刊俱乐部成功特点分析。

Marek Brzezinski, Ricarda Sawatzki, H Nicole Tran, Kathryn Price, Maren Gregersen, Celeste Wong, Chun-Miao Feng, Stephen Kimatian, K Annette Mizuguchi, Jasleen Kukreja, John D Mitchell, Kathy D Schlecht
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:没有研究调查期刊俱乐部(JCs)如何在麻醉学住院医师培训项目中实施。本研究的目的是通过(1)检查JCs的格式、内容和目标来缩小这一差距;(2)识别与更高的住院率和JC成功相关的特征;(3)检查项目主管对JCs的看法。方法:向麻醉项目主任发送41个问题的调查问卷。采用多变量逻辑回归、多变量线性回归和探索性因子分析对答案进行分析。结果:在美国各地发送的117份调查中,有80名项目主管做出了回应(回复率为68.4%)。在80个项目中,有77个(96.3%)项目设立了JC,其中93.2%的项目已经存在了2年以上。大多数JC(62.5%)既没有在会议前正式评价文章,也没有正式评价他们的JC(59.7%)。仅教职员工就组织了44.4%的JCs,并主持了69.9%的JCs。住院医师的角色主要限于在教师指导下发表选定的文章(83.3%)。平均住院率为49.7%。多变量线性回归分析确定了强制性住院医师出勤率、教师出勤率大于5人以及JC会议之间较长的间隔与较高的住院医师出勤率相关。只有49.3%的JCs是成功的,先验定义为住院率>50%,寿命≥2年。基于多变量逻辑回归的与JC成功相关的特征包括强制住院医生出勤和免费食物。结论:这项对麻醉学中JCs的最大规模调查发现,虽然JCs已经广泛建立,但其中一半仍有待改进。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Analysis of Successful Features of Anesthesiology Journal Clubs.

Background: No studies have examined how journal clubs (JCs) are implemented in anesthesiology residency training programs. The goal of the study was to close this gap by (1) examining the format, content, and goals of JCs; (2) identifying features associated with higher resident attendance and JC success; and (3) examining program directors' perspectives on JCs.

Methods: A 41-question survey was sent to anesthesiology program directors. Answers were analyzed using multivariable logistic regression, multivariable linear regression, and exploratory factor analysis.

Results: Out of 117 surveys sent across the United States, 80 program directors responded (68.4% response rate). Of the 80 programs, 77 (96.3%) programs have a JC, with 93.2% of them existing for more than 2 years. Most JCs (62.5%) neither formally appraised articles before meetings, nor formally evaluated their JC (59.7%). Faculty alone organized 44.4% and moderated 69.9% of the JCs. The role of residents was primarily limited to presenting selected articles with faculty guidance (83.3%). The average resident attendance was 49.7%. A multivariable linear regression analysis identified mandatory resident attendance, faculty turnout of >5 members, and longer intervals between JC meetings as features associated with higher resident attendance. Only 49.3% of JCs were successful as defined a priori by resident attendance >50% and longevity of ≥2 years. Features associated with JC success based on multivariable logistic regression included mandatory resident attendance and complimentary food.

Conclusions: This largest survey of JCs in anesthesiology found that while JCs are widely established, half of them could be improved.

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