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1.
Med Educ ; 2024 Apr 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38605442

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Despite tenacious efforts of continuing professional development (CPD) developers and educators, physician engagement in CPD is fraught with challenges. Research suggests that these educational interventions and the maintenance of professional competence systems that mandate them are often seen as impractical, decontextualized and check-box activities by participants. This study explores physicians' learning post graduate medical education (GME) training across their CPD journey to understand how they (a) conceive of themselves as learners and (b) engage in lifelong learning across the course of their professional careers. METHODS: Using narrative inquiry and holistic narrative analysis situated within a social constructivist orientation, we carried out individual interviews with physicians from across a large children's hospital network including academic hospitals, community hospitals and primary care practices. Timelines and story arcs were used to support the narrative analysis's re-storying. RESULTS: Twelve physicians from six different sub-specialties were interviewed. We identified three noteworthy challenges as particularly salient across participants' re-storied narratives: (i) train-on-a-track to treading water, (ii) learning takes a backseat, and (iii) learning through foraging or hunting and gathering. Participants described significant change when transitioning from GME to CPD learning. While participants identified as learners, they described the disorienting impact of losing GME's formal supports and structures. They articulated that patient care trumped learning as their top priority. They lamented having limited insight into their learning needs (e.g. little feedback data) and so resorted to engaging in CPD activities that were readily at hand-but not necessarily relevant-and to finding learning resources that might not be formally recognised for CPD credit. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians' learning journeys post-GME are challenging, and the systems created to support that learning are ill equipped to meet the needs of physicians transitioning from GME to CPD. To encourage meaningful learning, the complex interplay of factors impeding CPD engagement should inform future innovations.

2.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 29(1): 199-216, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37351698

RESUMO

Intrinsic inequity in assessment refers to sources of harmful discrimination inherent in the design of assessment tools and systems. This study seeks to understand intrinsic inequity in assessment systems by studying assessment policies and associated procedures in residency training, using general pediatrics as a discourse case study. Foucauldian discourse analysis (FDA) was conducted on assessment policy and procedure documents. Two authors independently prepared structured analytic notes using guiding questions. Documents and respective analytic notes were subsequently reviewed independently by all authors. Each author prepared further unstructured analytic notes on the documents' discourse. The authors then compared notes and constructed truth statements (i.e., interpretations of what the discourse establishes as true about the construct under study) and sub-strands (i.e., themes) that were repeated and legitimized across the documents via iterative discussion. Based on analysis, the authors constructed two truth statements. These truth statements, "good assessment is equitable assessment," and "everyone is responsible for inequity," conceptualized inequity in assessment as an isolated or individual-level aberration in an otherwise effective or neutral system. Closer examination of the truth statements and sub-strands in the discourse presented an alternative view, suggesting that inequity may in fact not be an aberration but rather an inherent feature of assessment systems.


Assuntos
Internato e Residência , Humanos , Criança , Políticas
3.
Med Teach ; : 1-8, 2024 Mar 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38460500

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Physician educators are often expected to direct educational programs and assume roles that conform to field norms for career advancement but that may not afford meaningful work for educators. The purpose of this study was to describe and analyse the perspectives and actions taken by physician educators in response to tension between feeling compelled to direct an educational program and doing educationally meaningful work. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We used data from a longitudinal study and focused on three participants who, over the course of the five-year study, offered significant insights into how physician educators act in ways that run counter to expectations for career advancement. Our narrative analysis entailed organizing data from interview transcripts into time-ordered displays, weaving data into counternarratives that were edited by participants, and using the theory of faculty agency (and its key constructs, strategic perspectives and strategic action) to thread the stories together. RESULTS: In each counternarrative, the participant deliberated their sense of being a physician educator (strategic perspectives) and when expectations became untenable, they did what they needed to do to engage in meaningful work (strategic action) rather than comply with expectations for career advancement in academic medicine. For one participant, faculty agency meant leaving academic medicine; for another, it meant reducing clinical time so that unpaid time could be devoted to education; and for another, it meant opting not do direct a reputable education program. CONCLUSIONS: Faculty agency is a useful theoretical lens for conceptualizing how physician educators navigate their careers in academic medicine. Counternarratives that illuminate faculty agency offer stories that describe alternate career paths and portend a different future for physician educators.

4.
J Gen Intern Med ; 38(14): 3252-3256, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37407762

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Arts-and-humanities-based interventions are commonly implemented in medical education to promote well-being and mitigate the risk of burnout. However, mechanisms for achieving these effects remain uncertain within graduate medical education. The emerging field of the positive humanities offers a lens to examine whether and how arts-based interventions support well-being in internal medicine interns. AIM: Through program evaluation of this visual art workshop, we used a positive humanities framework to elucidate potential mechanisms by which arts-based curricula support well-being in internal medicine interns. SETTING: We launched the re-FRAME workshop at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in winter 2020. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty-six PGY-1 trainees from one internal medicine residency program. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: The 3-h re-FRAME workshop consisted of an introductory session on emotional processing followed by two previously described arts-based interventions. PROGRAM EVALUATION: Participants completed an immediate post-workshop survey (91% response rate) assessing attitudes towards the session. Analysis of open-ended survey data demonstrated 4 categories for supporting well-being among participants: becoming emotionally aware/expressive through art, pausing for reflection, practicing nonjudgmental observation, and normalizing experiences through socialization. DISCUSSION: Our project substantiated proposed mechanisms from the positive humanities for supporting well-being-including reflectiveness, skill acquisition, socialization, and expressiveness-among medical interns.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Ciências Humanas , Humanos , Ciências Humanas/educação , Currículo , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina , Esgotamento Psicológico
5.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 27(1): 277-288, 2022 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34460054

RESUMO

This paper explores the use of theory in longitudinal qualitative research, an approach to research which explores lived experiences as they unfold. The authors illustrate how the complexity of conducting qualitative research through time drives an understanding and use of theory that differs from other research approaches. Longitudinal qualitative research considers time as fluid, subjective, and unbounded-in contrast to the more common taken-for-granted understanding of time as fixed, objective, and linear. Furthermore, longitudinal qualitative research is predicated on a premise of trust in the context of enduring research relationships. Therefore, while subject-matter theories used to investigate topics of interest to health professions educators may be useful frameworks for other types of research, longitudinal qualitative research needs theories that accommodate the myriad of changes in lived experiences through time. The authors share their decade-long, longitudinal qualitative research story, highlighting their decision points and insights. In doing so, they foreground issues such as time as fluid as an important contribution to health professions education literature.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Qualitativa , Humanos
6.
BMC Med Educ ; 22(1): 118, 2022 Feb 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35193579

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Little is known about using telehealth patient visits as an educational mode. Therefore, rapid implementation of telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic had to be done without understanding how to optimize telehealth for education. With the likely sustained/post-pandemic use of telehealth in ambulatory patient care, filling gaps in our understanding of how telehealth can be used for instruction in this context is critical. This study sought to understand perceptions of pediatric postgraduate trainees and supervisors on the use of telehealth for instruction in ambulatory settings with the goal of identifying effective ways to enhance learning during telehealth visits. METHODS: In May-June of 2020, the authors purposefully sampled first- and third-year postgraduate trainees and supervising attendings from pediatric fellowship programs at one institution that implemented telehealth for instructional activities. They conducted semi-structured interviews; interviews lasted a median of 51 min (trainees) and 41 min (supervisors). They conducted interviews and data analysis iteratively until reaching saturation. Using thematic analysis, they created codes and constructed themes from coded data. They organized themes using the Replace-Amplify-Transform (RAT) model, which proposes that technology can replace in-person learning and/or amplify and transform learning. RESULTS: First-year trainees (n = 6), third-year trainees (n = 5) and supervisors (n = 6) initially used telehealth to replace in-person learning. However, skills that could be practiced in telehealth visits differed from in-person visits and instructional activities felt rushed or awkward. Trainees and supervisors adapted and used telehealth to amplify learning by enhancing observation and autonomy. They also transformed learning, using telehealth to develop novel skills. CONCLUSIONS: To harness telehealth for instructional activities, our findings indicated that trainees and supervisors should shift from using it as a direct replacement for in-person education to taking advantage of novel opportunities to amplify and transform education in PGME. The authors provide data-driven recommendations to help PGME trainees, supervisors and educators capitalize on the educational advantages of telehealth.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Telemedicina , Criança , Humanos , Pandemias , Assistência ao Paciente , SARS-CoV-2
7.
Pediatr Crit Care Med ; 22(2): 172-180, 2021 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33065734

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To explore interrupters' and interruptees' experiences of interruptions occurring during morning rounds in a PICU in an attempt to understand better how to limit interruptions that threaten patient safety. DESIGN: Qualitative ethnographic study including observations, field interviews, and in-depth interviews. SETTING: A 55-bed PICU in a free-standing, quaternary-care children's hospital. SUBJECTS PARTICIPANTS: Attending physicians, fellow physicians, frontline clinicians (resident physicians and nurse practitioners), and nurses working in the PICU. INTERVENTIONS: Data collection occurred in two parts: 1) field observations during morning rounds with brief field interviews conducted with participants involved in an observed interruption and 2) in-depth interviews conducted with selected participants from prior field observations. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Data were coded using a constant comparative method with thematic analysis, clustering codes into groups, and subsequently into themes. We observed 11 rounding encounters (17 hr of observation and 48 patient encounters), conducting 25 field interviews and eight in-depth interviews. Themes included culture of interruption triage, interruption triage criteria, and barriers to interruption triage. Interruptees desired forming a culture of triage, whereby less-urgent interruptions were deferred until later or addressed through an asynchronous method; this desire was misaligned with interrupters who described ongoing interruption triage based on clinical changes, time-sensitivity, and interrupter comfort, despite not having a formal triage algorithm. Barriers to interruption triage included a lack of situational awareness and experience among interrupters and interruptees. CONCLUSIONS: Interrupters and interruptees did not have a shared understanding of the culture of triage within the PICU. Although interrupters attempted to triage interruptions, no formal triage algorithm existed and interruptees did not perceive a triaging culture. Using data from this study, we created a triage algorithm that could inform future studies, potentially decrease unnecessary interruptions, and optimize information sharing for essential interruptions.


Assuntos
Visitas de Preceptoria , Criança , Hospitais Pediátricos , Humanos , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva , Segurança do Paciente , Triagem
8.
Med Educ ; 55(10): 1205-1213, 2021 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34060657

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Despite its widespread application in medical education, belonging to a single community of practice does not reflect the overall experience of physician-educators. Knowing how physician-educators find their way among different communities of practice (ie their landscape of practice) has implications for professional development but the limited description in the literature. In this longitudinal qualitative research, we explored how physicians who pursue graduate degrees in medical education navigate their landscape of practice. METHODS: 11/29 physicians in one cohort of a masters in medical education programme were interviewed annually from 2016 (programme start) to 2020 (2 years post-graduation). We iteratively collected and analysed data, creating inductive codes and categorising coded data by mode of identification (engagement, imagination, alignment) and time. We organised narratives into time-ordered data matrices so that final analysis wove together mode, time and participant. RESULTS: All participants consistently spoke of navigating their landscape of practice, which included the community created in the graduate programme; but that single community 'doesn't define the journey itself'. They shifted engagement from teaching individual learners to translating what they learned in the graduate programme to develop educational projects and produce scholarship. They shifted the imagination from relying on internal and external assessments to experience-inspired versions of their future self. And they shifted alignment from belonging to the graduate programme's community of practice, then belonging to different communities in their landscape of practice and ultimately focussing on communities that mattered most to them. DISCUSSION: Physicians in a graduate programme in medical education navigated their dynamic landscape of practice by shifting how they engaged in medical education, as well as what they imagined and who they aligned with as physician-educators. Our work offers novel insights into how knowledgeability emerges through time as overlapping modes of identification.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Médicos , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina , Bolsas de Estudo , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Pesquisa Qualitativa
9.
Med Educ ; 55(11): 1253-1260, 2021 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33847408

RESUMO

CONTEXT: Longitudinal qualitative research is an approach to research that entails generating qualitative data with the same participants over extended periods of time to understand their lived experiences as those experiences unfold. Knowing about dynamic lived experiences in medical education, that is, learning journeys with stops and starts, detours, transitions and reversals, enriches understanding of events and accomplishments along the way. The purpose of this paper is to create access points to longitudinal qualitative research in support of increasing its use in medical education. METHODS: The authors explore and argue for different conceptualisations of time: analysing lived experiences through time versus analysing lived experiences cross-sectional or via 2-point follow-up studies and considering time as subjective and fluid as well as objective and fixed. They introduce applications of longitudinal qualitative research from several academic domains: investigating development and formal education; building longitudinal research relationship; and exploring interconnections between individual journeys and social structures. They provide an illustrative overview of longitudinal qualitative research in medical education, and end with practical advice, or pearls, for medical education investigators interested in using this research approach: collecting data recursively; analysing longitudinal data in three strands; addressing mutual reflexivity; using theory to illuminate time; and making a long-term commitment to longitudinal qualitative research. CONCLUSIONS: Longitudinal qualitative research stretches investigators to think differently about time and undertake more complex analyses to understand dynamic lived experiences. Research in medical education will likely be impoverished if the focus remains on time as fixed. Seeing things qualitatively through time, where time is fluid and the past, present and future interpenetrate, produces a rich understanding that can move the field forward.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Estudos Transversais , Pessoal de Saúde , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Pesquisa Qualitativa
10.
Med Educ ; 55(2): 148-158, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33448459

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Professional identity formation (PIF) is a growing area of research in medical education. However, it is unclear whether the present research base is suitable for understanding PIF in physicians considered to be under-represented in medicine (URM). This meta-ethnography examined the qualitative PIF literature from 2012 to 2019 to assess its capacity to shine light on the experiences of minoritised physicians. METHODS: Data were gathered using a search of six well-known medical education journals for the term 'professional identit*' in titles, keywords, abstracts and subheadings, delineated with the date range of 2012-2019. All non-relevant abstracts were removed and papers were then further reduced to those that focused only on learners' experiences. This left 67 articles in the final dataset, which were analysed using a collaborative approach among a team of researchers. The team members used their professional expertise as qualitative researchers and personal experiences as minoritised individuals to synthesise and interpret the PIF literature. RESULTS: Four conceptual categories were identified as impacting PIF: Individual versus Sociocultural Influences; the Formal versus the Hidden Curriculum; Institutional versus Societal Values; and Negotiation of Identity versus Dissonance in Identity. However, a major gap was identified; only one study explored experiences of PIF in URM physicians and there was an almost complete absence of critical stances used to study PIF. Combined, these findings suggest that PIF research is building on existing theories without questioning their validity with reference to minoritised physicians. CONCLUSIONS: From a post-colonial perspective, the fact that race and ethnicity have been largely absent, invisible or considered irrelevant within PIF research is problematic. A new line of inquiry is needed, one that uses alternative frameworks, such as critical theory, to account for the ways in which power and domination influence PIF for URM physicians in order to foreground how larger sociohistorical issues influence and shape the identities of minoritised physicians.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Médicos , Humanos , Grupos Minoritários , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Identificação Social
11.
Teach Learn Med ; 32(5): 466-475, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32458706

RESUMO

Phenomenon: The number of women who enter medical school has been on par with the number of men for almost 20 years, but parity in training has not translated to equity in professional life. To capitalize on the perspective of women faculty with established careers in academic medicine and to bring theory to the largely descriptive research on gender inequity in academic medicine, the authors used the Theory of Gendered Organizations to demonstrate how academic medical centers function as inherently gendered organizations. Approach: The authors recruited women faculty with established careers at one academic medical center based on purposeful and snowball sampling and interviewed 30 participants in Summer/Fall 2018. They coded and analyzed data inductively. In later stages of analysis they used sensitizing concepts from the Theory of Gendered Organizations to guide our focus on formal expectations of, and informal interactions in, the academic medical center. Findings: The disjuncture, i.e., "lip service", between formal expectations intended to be gender-neutral and informal interactions that advantaged men demonstrated how the academic medical center functioned as a gendered organization. Participants experienced these interactions as being treated differently than men and/or being stereotyped. As their careers progressed, participants recognized gender inequity as embedded in the organization, or as they said, "the way things were stacked". Subsequent to this recognition, they navigated this gendered organization by advocating for themselves and younger women faculty. Insights: Women with established careers in academic medicine experienced gender inequity as embedded in the organization but navigate gendered interactions by advocating for themselves and for younger women. Using the Theory of Gendered Organizations as an analytic lens demonstrates how academic medical centers function as gendered organizations; these findings can inform both theory-based research and pragmatic change strategies.


Assuntos
Centros Médicos Acadêmicos , Docentes de Medicina , Cultura Organizacional , Médicas , Adulto , Idoso , Mobilidade Ocupacional , Feminino , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Modelos Teóricos , Pesquisa Qualitativa
13.
N Engl J Med ; 371(19): 1803-12, 2014 Nov 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25372088

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Miscommunications are a leading cause of serious medical errors. Data from multicenter studies assessing programs designed to improve handoff of information about patient care are lacking. METHODS: We conducted a prospective intervention study of a resident handoff-improvement program in nine hospitals, measuring rates of medical errors, preventable adverse events, and miscommunications, as well as resident workflow. The intervention included a mnemonic to standardize oral and written handoffs, handoff and communication training, a faculty development and observation program, and a sustainability campaign. Error rates were measured through active surveillance. Handoffs were assessed by means of evaluation of printed handoff documents and audio recordings. Workflow was assessed through time-motion observations. The primary outcome had two components: medical errors and preventable adverse events. RESULTS: In 10,740 patient admissions, the medical-error rate decreased by 23% from the preintervention period to the postintervention period (24.5 vs. 18.8 per 100 admissions, P<0.001), and the rate of preventable adverse events decreased by 30% (4.7 vs. 3.3 events per 100 admissions, P<0.001). The rate of nonpreventable adverse events did not change significantly (3.0 and 2.8 events per 100 admissions, P=0.79). Site-level analyses showed significant error reductions at six of nine sites. Across sites, significant increases were observed in the inclusion of all prespecified key elements in written documents and oral communication during handoff (nine written and five oral elements; P<0.001 for all 14 comparisons). There were no significant changes from the preintervention period to the postintervention period in the duration of oral handoffs (2.4 and 2.5 minutes per patient, respectively; P=0.55) or in resident workflow, including patient-family contact and computer time. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of the handoff program was associated with reductions in medical errors and in preventable adverse events and with improvements in communication, without a negative effect on workflow. (Funded by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and others.).


Assuntos
Comunicação , Internato e Residência/organização & administração , Erros Médicos/estatística & dados numéricos , Transferência da Responsabilidade pelo Paciente/normas , Segurança do Paciente , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Tempo de Internação , Masculino , Erros Médicos/prevenção & controle , Estudos de Casos Organizacionais , Pediatria/educação , Pediatria/organização & administração , Estudos Prospectivos , Índice de Gravidade de Doença , Fluxo de Trabalho
14.
Pediatr Crit Care Med ; 17(7): e303-8, 2016 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27182784

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Our study objectives were to explore moral distress among pediatric team clinicians within the context of resuscitation experiences, and determine whether there were any distinctively ethical perspectives on moral distress that could be conceptualized as challenges to professional integrity, rather than to previously described psychological responses of clinicians. DESIGN: Descriptive, exploratory qualitative study. SETTING: A large tertiary pediatric academic hospital in Houston, TX. SUBJECTS: Twenty-five PICU resuscitation team clinicians were interviewed from December 2012 to April 2013. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: All clinicians reported experiencing moral distress during certain resuscitations. Twenty-one of 25 clinicians reflected and acknowledged that their sense of professional integrity had been challenged during those resuscitation events. Four main components of resuscitation experience that induced moral distress were identified: 1) experiences where there was lack of understanding of the big picture; 2) experiences where there was suboptimal team leadership; 3) experiences where there was variable meanings to the word "resuscitation"; and 4) experiences were there was uncertainty of role responsibility. CONCLUSIONS: The perception of moral distress exists among pediatric clinicians during resuscitations and could be conceptualized as challenges to professional integrity. This ethical framework offers an alternative approach to understanding and investigating the complex layers of moral distress.


Assuntos
Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Princípios Morais , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/ética , Profissionalismo/ética , Ressuscitação/ética , Estresse Psicológico/etiologia , Criança , Feminino , Hospitais Pediátricos , Humanos , Satisfação no Emprego , Masculino , Pediatria , Pesquisa Qualitativa
15.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 20(4): 1073-85, 2015 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25633168

RESUMO

Using Bourdieu's theoretical model as a lens for analysis, we sought to understand how students experience the undergraduate medical education (UME) milieu, focusing on how they navigate transitions from the preclinical phase, to the major clinical year (MCY), and to the preparation for residency phase. Twenty-two medical students participated in this longitudinal case study. Students had similar preclinical and post-MCY experiences but different MCY experiences (rotational vs. longitudinal tracks). We interviewed students every 6 months in the preclinical phase, mid-way through MCY, and 7-8 months before graduation (101 total interviews). We inductively created codes, iteratively revised codes to best-fit the data, and thematically clustered codes into Bourdieu-informed categories: field (social structures), capital (resources) and habitus (dispositions). We found that students acclimated to shifts in the UME field as they moved through medical school: from medical school itself to the health system and back. To successfully navigate transitions, students learned to secure capital as medical knowledge and social connections in the preclinical and preparation for residency phases, and as reputable patient care and being noticed in the clinical phase. To obtain capital, and be well-positioned for the next phase of training, students consistently relied on dispositions of initiative and flexibility. In summary, students experience the complex context of medical school through a series of transitions. Efforts to improve UME would be well-served by greater awareness of the social structures (field) that students encounter, the resources to which they afford value (capital), and the dispositions which aid acquisition of these resources (habitus).


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina/organização & administração , Estudantes de Medicina/psicologia , Feminino , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Masculino , Modelos Teóricos , Sociologia Médica
16.
Acad Pediatr ; 24(1): 162-172, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37567441

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Some pediatric residents report experiencing less autonomy when working clinically with pediatric hospital medicine (PHM) fellows than with attendings alone. We sought to explore pediatric senior resident (SR) experiences working clinically with PHM fellows, with a focus on characterizing fellow behaviors that could impact perceived resident autonomy. METHODS: In this qualitative study, we conducted virtual semistructured interviews with pediatric SRs. We recorded, deidentified, and transcribed interviews for codebook thematic analysis, making iterative adjustments to our codebook and themes until reaching thematic sufficiency. RESULTS: We conducted 17 interviews. A subanalysis identified key components of the resident mental model of autonomy, including independent clinical decision-making with 3 core qualifiers: 1) plan follow-through, 2) availability of a safety net, and 3) ownership. Our primary analysis identified 4 key themes (with a total of 7 contributory subthemes) describing resident experiences of autonomy, scaffolded based on an organizing framework adapted from Bronfenbrenner's ecological model including 1) microsystem factors (based on direct resident-fellow or resident-leadership team interactions), 2) mesosystem factors (based on fellow-attending interactions), 3) exosystem factors (based on fellow-intrinsic characteristics), and 4) macrosystem factors (cultural values, norms, and policies governing academic pediatrics). CONCLUSIONS: Many factors impact perceived resident autonomy on PHM fellow-inclusive teams. Although some are related to direct resident-fellow interactions, many others are more complex and may reflect resident interactions with the leadership team, attending-fellow dynamics, and the influence of cultural context. Based on our analysis, we propose several best-practice recommendations directed at fellows, attendings, the fellow-attending dyad, and Graduate Medical Education programs overall.


Assuntos
Medicina Hospitalar , Internato e Residência , Humanos , Criança , Bolsas de Estudo , Hospitais Pediátricos , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina
17.
J Clin Neurophysiol ; 2024 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38376951

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Electroencephalography (EEG) is commonly used in neurology, but there is variability in how neurologists interpret EEGs, potentially from variability in EEG teaching. Little is known about how EEG teaching is done to prepare neurologists for professional practice. METHODS: We interviewed a group of EEG experts to characterize their teaching practices around continuous EEG (cEEG). We used signature pedagogy as a framework to analyze and interpret the data. RESULTS: We identified pervasive and characteristic forms of cEEG teaching. Teaching is based on apprenticeship, relying on "learning by doing" in the context of real-life clinical practice. There are habitual steps that learners take to anchor teaching, which typically occurs during rounds. There is a common language and core knowledge that trainees need to master early in their training. CONCLUSIONS: There are pervasive characteristic forms of cEEG teaching. These findings can help facilitate instructional design and implementation of complementary or enhanced cEEG teaching practices.

18.
Pediatr Pulmonol ; 2024 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38961695

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Although positive airway pressure (PAP) is effective for treating obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in infants, there is a lack of data on caregivers' experiences administering PAP at home. Understanding caregivers' perspectives may change health care professionals approach to PAP initiation. Our study aimed to gain comprehensive insight into caregivers' beliefs, perceptions, and challenges associated with implementing PAP for infants with OSA, considering the transition from inpatient hospitalization to home. METHODS: In this single-center prospective longitudinal study, caregivers of infants with OSA less than 12 months old who were initiated PAP during inpatient hospitalization underwent two semi-structured interviews over 3 months. The interview data were analyzed using directed content analysis, utilizing the health belief and socioecological models as theoretical frameworks. Data were coded and clustered into themes that reflected the evolving perspectives and experiences of caregivers. RESULTS: Eight caregivers completed semi-structured interviews, revealing three key themes. First, despite initial negative attitudes towards the equipment, caregivers recognized PAP benefits and through self-efficacy and cues to action, were motivated to use PAP at home. Second, caregivers encountered various barriers to adherence; however, caregivers' self-efficacy improved with time and practice. Lastly, interpersonal, organizational, and community support enhanced adherence while lack thereof hindered implementation. CONCLUSION: Caregivers of infants with OSA understand the importance of PAP therapy. Providing family-centered care and targeted interventions helps caregivers maintain adherence to PAP for infants. By understanding the lived experiences of caregivers, health care professionals can better meet the needs of families and optimize the effectiveness of PAP.

19.
J Pain Symptom Manage ; 67(4): e367-e374, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38244707

RESUMO

CONTEXT: A growth mindset and mastery approach have gained attention as useful learning orientations in medical education, however few studies of interventions to foster these orientations exist. OBJECTIVES: We sought to discover whether a communication skills session on delivering serious news could foster a communication growth mindset and/or a mastery approach in medical students. METHODS: This was an interventional survey study of third-year medical students before and after a session on delivering serious news. Students were administered a communication mindset survey before and after the session; achievement goal and learning environment surveys were administered after the session. Chi-square tests were used to assess the difference in pre and post mindsets. Logistic regression was used to determine the odds of achieving a mastery approach with pre- and post-communication growth mindset as the independent variables. RESULTS: Students' communication growth mindset increased from 79% (n = 186) before the intervention to 92% (n = 142) after the intervention. Achievement goal analysis demonstrated that 64% (n = 91) of students had a mastery approach, 14% (n = 20) had a performance approach and 22% (n = 32) had an avoidant approach. Ninety-nine percent (n = 151) felt the session provided a safe learning environment. The odds of having a mastery approach correlated with both pre and post-intervention growth mindset, with post-session growth mindset having the strongest correlation. CONCLUSIONS: A novel communication skills session on delivering serious news fostered a communication growth mindset in third year medical students. Most students exhibited a mastery approach to learning; this approach was more likely when they had a growth mindset.


Assuntos
Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Motivação , Educação Continuada , Comunicação
20.
Am J Hosp Palliat Care ; 41(2): 158-166, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36945136

RESUMO

Palliative care (PC) longitudinal curricula are increasingly being recognized as important in Undergraduate Medical Education (UME). They are however, not yet commonplace, and where they do exist may be implemented without a systematic, prospective approach to curriculum evaluation. This paper describes an implementation of a new longitudinal curriculum at the Perelman School of Medicine (PSOM) at the University of Pennsylvania. We used the Context Input Process Product (CIPP) model, a holistic evaluation model, to assess the local environment, design the curriculum, guide the improvement process, and evaluate outcomes. Comprehensive models such as CIPP provide a more robust approach to curriculum evaluation than outcomes-only models and may be of use to other programs who are implementing new curricula or improving upon existing programs.


Assuntos
Educação de Graduação em Medicina , Medicina , Estudantes de Medicina , Humanos , Cuidados Paliativos , Currículo
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