{"title":"在以社区为基础的对抗疗法住院医师计划中为家庭医学医师介绍整骨疗法课程","authors":"J. Turnbull, D. Merck, Karri MacMillan","doi":"10.51894/001c.9059","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"CONTEXT Will increased exposure to osteopathic medicine improve allopathic resident and attending physicians’ support of implementing an osteopathic curriculum in graduate medical education? The overall goal of this quality improvement project was to examine the familiarity and interest of allopathically-trained residents and attendings with osteopathic medicine before, and after, a brief educational workshop. METHODS Setting: Mercy Health Saint Mary’s Hospital in Grand Rapids, MI. Participants included a sample of 27 Family Medicine (FM) residents and attendings who had been trained in allopathic medical schools. First, a one-hour lecture on “Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine” was given. The lecture included a PowerPoint presentation followed by a 15-minute hands-on demonstration of osteopathic diagnosis and treatment. A pre and post-workshop survey modified from another larger study was administered to all attendees. Primary selected outcomes included percentage of allopathic resident participation in attendance and pre-post-workshop response differences. RESULTS Of the 31 allopathic residents in this community-based FM program, 23 (74.2%) were present for the lecture and completed both a pre and post-workshop survey. A total of 24 (78%) of participants had never attended a previous lecture on osteopathic medicine. Respondents’ overall attitude regarding the implementation of an osteopathic curriculum was generally positive after the workshop. Of the 27 participants (23 residents and four attendings) surveyed before the lecture, 23 (85.2%) were initially interested in learning how to perform osteopathic manual treatment (OMT), this increasing to 25 (92.6%) after the workshop. The Mercy Health FM resident respondents were initially first supportive of osteopathic medicine at 59.3%, improving to 77.8% after completing the workshop. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that many allopathically trained physicians may lack exposure to osteopathic medicine principles. In this allopathic-oriented residency sample setting, a relatively brief workshop increased attendees’ interest in osteopathic medicine. Results suggest that initial and refresher exposure to osteopathic medicine content and OMT practices during residency curricula can be used to elicit support from allopathically-trained resident physicians.","PeriodicalId":74853,"journal":{"name":"Spartan medical research journal","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Introducing Osteopathic Curriculum for Family Medicine Physicians in a Community-based Allopathic Residency Program\",\"authors\":\"J. Turnbull, D. Merck, Karri MacMillan\",\"doi\":\"10.51894/001c.9059\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"CONTEXT Will increased exposure to osteopathic medicine improve allopathic resident and attending physicians’ support of implementing an osteopathic curriculum in graduate medical education? The overall goal of this quality improvement project was to examine the familiarity and interest of allopathically-trained residents and attendings with osteopathic medicine before, and after, a brief educational workshop. METHODS Setting: Mercy Health Saint Mary’s Hospital in Grand Rapids, MI. Participants included a sample of 27 Family Medicine (FM) residents and attendings who had been trained in allopathic medical schools. First, a one-hour lecture on “Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine” was given. The lecture included a PowerPoint presentation followed by a 15-minute hands-on demonstration of osteopathic diagnosis and treatment. A pre and post-workshop survey modified from another larger study was administered to all attendees. Primary selected outcomes included percentage of allopathic resident participation in attendance and pre-post-workshop response differences. RESULTS Of the 31 allopathic residents in this community-based FM program, 23 (74.2%) were present for the lecture and completed both a pre and post-workshop survey. A total of 24 (78%) of participants had never attended a previous lecture on osteopathic medicine. Respondents’ overall attitude regarding the implementation of an osteopathic curriculum was generally positive after the workshop. Of the 27 participants (23 residents and four attendings) surveyed before the lecture, 23 (85.2%) were initially interested in learning how to perform osteopathic manual treatment (OMT), this increasing to 25 (92.6%) after the workshop. The Mercy Health FM resident respondents were initially first supportive of osteopathic medicine at 59.3%, improving to 77.8% after completing the workshop. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that many allopathically trained physicians may lack exposure to osteopathic medicine principles. In this allopathic-oriented residency sample setting, a relatively brief workshop increased attendees’ interest in osteopathic medicine. Results suggest that initial and refresher exposure to osteopathic medicine content and OMT practices during residency curricula can be used to elicit support from allopathically-trained resident physicians.\",\"PeriodicalId\":74853,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Spartan medical research journal\",\"volume\":\" \",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2019-07-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"1\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Spartan medical research journal\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.51894/001c.9059\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Spartan medical research journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.51894/001c.9059","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
摘要
增加对整骨医学的接触会提高对抗疗法住院医师和主治医师对在研究生医学教育中实施整骨课程的支持吗?该质量改进项目的总体目标是在一次简短的教育研讨会之前和之后,检查接受过异病培训的住院医师和骨科医生对骨科医学的熟悉程度和兴趣。方法设置:密歇根州大急流城的慈善健康圣玛丽医院。参与者包括27名家庭医学(FM)住院医师和在对抗疗法医学院接受过培训的就诊者。首先,进行了一个小时的“骨病医学基础”讲座。讲座包括PowerPoint演示,然后是15分钟的骨科诊断和治疗实践演示。对所有与会者进行了一项由另一项大型研究修改而来的研讨会前后调查。主要选择的结果包括对抗疗法住院医师参与率和研讨会前后反应差异。结果在该社区FM项目的31名对抗疗法居民中,23人(74.2%)参加了讲座,并完成了研讨会前后的调查。共有24名(78%)参与者从未参加过之前的整骨医学讲座。研讨会结束后,受访者对整骨课程实施的总体态度总体上是积极的。在讲座前接受调查的27名参与者(23名居民和4名与会者)中,23人(85.2%)最初对学习如何进行骨科手动治疗感兴趣,研讨会后这一比例增至25人(92.6%)。Mercy Health FM居民受访者最初支持整骨医学的比例为59.3%,在完成研讨会后提高到77.8%。结论这些结果表明,许多受过异病训练的医生可能缺乏对整骨医学原理的了解。在这个以对抗疗法为导向的住院样本环境中,一个相对简短的研讨会增加了与会者对整骨医学的兴趣。研究结果表明,在住院医师课程中,最初和进修接触整骨医学内容和OMT实践可以用来获得接受异病培训的住院医师的支持。
Introducing Osteopathic Curriculum for Family Medicine Physicians in a Community-based Allopathic Residency Program
CONTEXT Will increased exposure to osteopathic medicine improve allopathic resident and attending physicians’ support of implementing an osteopathic curriculum in graduate medical education? The overall goal of this quality improvement project was to examine the familiarity and interest of allopathically-trained residents and attendings with osteopathic medicine before, and after, a brief educational workshop. METHODS Setting: Mercy Health Saint Mary’s Hospital in Grand Rapids, MI. Participants included a sample of 27 Family Medicine (FM) residents and attendings who had been trained in allopathic medical schools. First, a one-hour lecture on “Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine” was given. The lecture included a PowerPoint presentation followed by a 15-minute hands-on demonstration of osteopathic diagnosis and treatment. A pre and post-workshop survey modified from another larger study was administered to all attendees. Primary selected outcomes included percentage of allopathic resident participation in attendance and pre-post-workshop response differences. RESULTS Of the 31 allopathic residents in this community-based FM program, 23 (74.2%) were present for the lecture and completed both a pre and post-workshop survey. A total of 24 (78%) of participants had never attended a previous lecture on osteopathic medicine. Respondents’ overall attitude regarding the implementation of an osteopathic curriculum was generally positive after the workshop. Of the 27 participants (23 residents and four attendings) surveyed before the lecture, 23 (85.2%) were initially interested in learning how to perform osteopathic manual treatment (OMT), this increasing to 25 (92.6%) after the workshop. The Mercy Health FM resident respondents were initially first supportive of osteopathic medicine at 59.3%, improving to 77.8% after completing the workshop. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that many allopathically trained physicians may lack exposure to osteopathic medicine principles. In this allopathic-oriented residency sample setting, a relatively brief workshop increased attendees’ interest in osteopathic medicine. Results suggest that initial and refresher exposure to osteopathic medicine content and OMT practices during residency curricula can be used to elicit support from allopathically-trained resident physicians.