Journal of general internal medicine
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Holistic review has become the gold standard for residency selection. As a result, many programs are de-emphasizing standardized exam scores and other normative metrics. However, if standardized exam scores predict passing of an initial certifying exam, this may lead to an increase in board failure rates within specific residency training programs who do not emphasize test scores on entry. ⋯ All programs do not recruit students entering residency with an identical chance of passing boards. Therefore, we believe the ABMS member boards should stop publicly reporting raw certifying exam rates above a certain threshold for normative comparison. We strongly encourage the use of learning analytics to create a residency "expected board pass rate" that would be a better metric for program evaluation and accreditation.
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Editorial Review
Using Dashboards to Support Continuous Quality Improvement in Undergraduate and Graduate Medical Education.
Like other complex systems, medical education programs require a systematic continuous quality improvement (CQI) approach to drive effective improvement. Accreditation bodies in both undergraduate medical education (UME) and graduate medical education (GME) require programs to have effective CQI processes. Dashboards facilitate visualization and tracking of key metrics that impact medical education programming, thus driving excellence. ⋯ In developing dashboards, it is important to consider data management including oversight and appropriate sharing of reports. When effectively developed and delivered to key parties, data dashboards serve as valuable tools to drive improvement of medical education programing. The purpose of this paper is to provide guidance for dashboard implementation and use in medical education, with a focus on UME and GME, based on available literature and experiences in our own institutions.
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While Women's Health (WH) is a priority for primary care, (Family Medicine (FM), Internal Medicine (IM), Pediatrics (Peds), and combined Medicine/Pediatrics (Med/Peds)), residency curricula remain heterogeneous with deficits in graduates' WH expertise and skills. The overall objective of this study was to assess the quality of WH curricula at primary care residency programs in the United States (US), with a focus on topics in obstetrics and gynecology (OBGYN). ⋯ OBGYN educational curricula for primary care trainees in the US was varied with gaps in represented residents, content, assessments, and study quality.
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Psychological safety is the feeling that one can take interpersonal risks without fear of negative consequences including retaliation, intimidation, or rejection. The literature base on psychological safety in medical education is increasing. Despite increasing recognition in the medical literature, many medical practitioners and educators are uncertain about the background and effects of psychological safety on medical education. ⋯ While it is recognized that higher psychological safety is important, creating better psychological safety is a complex challenge analogous to patient safety, well-being, and healthcare disparity. The challenges for environments with lower psychological safety are understanding what to fix and how to fix it, and recognition that quick fixes are elusive. Moving forward, medical educators must have a better understanding of how to enhance psychological safety.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
A Rapid Response Mobile Application Improves First-Year Resident Clinical Performance During Simulated Care Events: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Rapid response teams (RRTs) are critical to the timely and appropriate management of acutely decompensating patients. In the academic setting, the vital role of RRT leader is often filled by a junior resident physician who may lack the necessary medical knowledge and experience. Cognitive aids help improve guideline adherence and may support resident performance as they transition into leadership roles. ⋯ Access to a rapid response mobile application improved the quality of care administered by interns during two simulated rapid response scenarios as determined by a decrease in time to ordering critical medications and improved performance scores. The intervention group found the mobile application to be usable. This work adds to existing literature supporting the use of technology-based cognitive aids to improve patient care.