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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38688822

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Understanding factors that motivate and deter student pharmacists from joining professional pharmacy organizations may assist schools and organizations in determining ways to recruit, engage, and support the next generation of pharmacy professionals. The objective is to identify motivating and hindering factors related to student pharmacist membership in professional pharmacy organizations. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was sent to the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Student Services Personnel community members for distribution to student pharmacists at their respective schools. The survey collected demographic data, determined the extent of student membership and leadership involvement within professional organizations, and assessed factors that motivate and deter student pharmacist membership in organizations. RESULTS: 467 students completed the survey. Seventy percent indicated they are currently involved in one or more pharmacy organizations. Final-year students were less likely to join organizations than other professional years (p < 0.001). Women (p = 0.001) were more likely to join and hold leadership positions, as were younger-aged students (p = 0.001) and those living on or near campus (p = 0.049). Opportunities for professional development was the highest-ranked factor motivating students to join a professional organization, and the time required for participation was the highest-ranked hindering factor. CONCLUSION: Numerous factors affect student pharmacists' decisions to join professional pharmacy organizations. This information may assist in determining ways to recruit and engage students starting early in their pharmacy education. It may be prudent to redefine student engagement within professional organizations, especially in the context of new generations of students.

2.
J Osteopath Med ; 124(4): 141-145, 2024 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38197639

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Faculty productivity is of interest for hospital and university administrators as pressure is placed on them by government and private payors. Further, the effect of trainees on clinical productivity is of personal interest to physicians because their performance evaluations and earning potential are often tied to their productivity. Several groups have utilized creative methodology to study the effect of learners on emergency department (ED) productivity, but they were faced with multiple confounding variables for which it was difficult to adjust. In this study, we utilize relative value unit (RVU)/h to study the effect of resident physicians and medical students on the productivity of academic emergency physicians (EPs) during the implementation of a new residency program. Each physician's productivity on shifts with distinct types of learners present is compared to their shifts worked without any learners during the same time frame. Each attending physician serves as their own control while the confounding variables introduced by comparing over multiple years are minimized. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study is to measure the influence of emergency medicine (EM) residents on the clinical productivity of attending EPs. METHODS: We conducted an observational study of a single ED during implementation of a new residency program. The productivity of each EP was measured by RVU/h billed. Trainees' schedules and end-of-shift evaluations were utilized to determine what learners (if any) were working with the EP on each shift. RVU/h calculations were performed for each EP (overall, when working without learners, and when working with each of the four learner categories). The primary outcome (determined a priori) was the difference in RVU/h for the attending EPs when they worked without learners compared to when they worked a majority of their shift with at least one learner. The secondary outcome (also determined a priori) was determining the influence of the learners of each type on EP RVU/h for the subgrouped shifts in which a learner was present for the majority of the shift. RESULTS: There was no significant difference in mean EP RVU/h when attendings worked with a medical student or non-EM R1 in comparison to working without learners in the 1761 ED encounters analyzed (12.95 RVU/h vs. 12.52 RVU/h; p=0.125). Although there was variability among individual physicians, EP RVU/h increased significantly for the overall group when one or more EM R1s were present (15.19 RVU/h with one EM R1 present, 15.25 RVU/h with two, 24.75 RVU/h with three; p<0.001). Similarly, mean EP productivity increased significantly with the addition of an EM R2 (17.96 RVU/h vs. 16.84 RVU/h; p=0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The presence of EM residents was positively associated with the clinical productivity of EM faculty as measured by RVU/h. There was also a positive association between productivity and the number of EM residents present as well as their training level. Non-EM residents and medical students had no effect on EP productivity.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine , Internship and Residency , Physicians , Students, Medical , Humans , Emergency Medicine/education , Emergency Service, Hospital
3.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 64(1): 268-272, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37549733

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The use of progesterone as a component of feminizing gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) is controversial; however, use in transgender women continues owing to anecdotal reports of benefit. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to provide quantifiable outcomes data regarding the use of progesterone in transgender women by comparing groups from this population who use feminizing GAHT with and without progesterone. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study captured data from transgender female patients seen at the Summa PRIDE Clinic between September 2019 and December 2021. Data were extracted from chart documentation for patients who were prescribed feminizing GAHT, with and without progesterone, for at least 6 months during the study window. Outcomes included satisfaction with breast development, satisfaction with libido, mental health trends, and weight change at 0, 6, and 9 months from initiation of GAHT. RESULTS: A total of 88 charts were reviewed (59 in the standard group, 29 in the progesterone group). The progesterone group had statistically significant improvements in satisfaction with breast development at 6 months (53.8% vs. 19.6%; P = 0.004) and 9 months (71.4% vs. 20.8%; P = 0.003). The progesterone group had more patients at goal testosterone levels < 55 ng/dL at 6 months (47.6% vs. 33%) and 9 months (50% vs. 24.4%), but these were not statistically different. The progesterone group was also more likely to show improved provider-documented mental health at 6 months (70.6% vs. 28.2%; P = 0.009); however, the difference was not statistically significant at 9 months. There were no differences between groups for weight change and patient satisfaction with libido. CONCLUSION: The addition of progesterone to standard feminizing GAHT was associated with greater satisfaction with breast development and improved patient mental health within 6 months compared with standard GAHT regimens alone in this patient population. Progesterone's impact on libido, testosterone suppression, and weight were nonsignificant.


Subject(s)
Progesterone , Transgender Persons , Humans , Female , Progesterone/therapeutic use , Retrospective Studies , Ambulatory Care Facilities , Testosterone/therapeutic use
4.
Curr Pharm Teach Learn ; 16(1): 34-38, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38158331

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Alumni are essential but often overlooked stakeholders for pharmacy programs, and engaging alumni in philanthropy, volunteerism, events, and communication may have important implications for the growth and success of pharmacy programs. This research aims to preliminarily characterize pharmacy alumni engagement across four metrics and provide a call to action for standardized tracking and reporting of alumni engagement efforts across the Academy. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was sent to alumni relations and advancement personnel at United States schools and colleges of pharmacy. The survey gathered information on the accuracy of pharmacy alumni records, alumni engagement within four categories (philanthropy, communication, events, and volunteering), alumni relations personnel, and barriers to alumni engagement efforts. RESULTS: Respondents reported using various database systems to track and measure alumni engagement, and 41% noted having accurate pharmacy alumni records. Opportunities for alumni engagement within the four categories varied across institutions. Fifty percent of respondents indicated that one full-time equivalent position is allocated to pharmacy alumni engagement efforts at their institution. Barriers to alumni engagement efforts included limited budgets, and staff, engaging alumni via in-person events, and maintaining accurate alumni records. CONCLUSIONS: The Academy may benefit from expanding the annual alumni survey and developing a consistent tracking mechanism to capture and report alumni engagement activities. Additionally, education on alumni engagement metrics and potential collaborative efforts with institutional alumni relations personnel would be of value. This is vital in developing and optimizing alumni relations efforts and engaging pharmacy alumni bases.


Subject(s)
Pharmaceutical Services , Pharmacy , Humans , United States , Benchmarking , Cross-Sectional Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires
5.
J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther ; 28(7): 603-609, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38025145

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Therapeutic drug monitoring in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has been used to achieve and maintain remission. Few guidelines exist to aid clinicians in the adjustment of anti-tumor necrosis factor therapies. The objective was to assess the agreement between real-world postinduction and posteriori analysis of retrospective data, using 2 novel pharmacokinetic (PK) models for adalimumab. METHODS: A retrospective chart review was conducted in pediatric IBD patients treated with adalimumab. A Bayesian clinical decision support tool (InsightRX) was used. Postinduction serum concentration measurements of adalimumab were performed by drug-tolerant, homogenous shift mobility assay. Predicted serum adalimumab concentrations from both models were compared to the actual serum concentrations through a Bland-Altman analysis. Paired sample t test was used for equivalence. RESULTS: A total of 47 patients were included. Forty-one patients (87%) had Crohn disease, and 30 (64%) were male. Most were induced with 160 mg of adalimumab and maintained on 40 mg biweekly. No significant difference resulted between the de Klaver average prediction and mean population concentration (p = 0.294). Significant difference was observed between Ternant and mean population serum adalimumab concentration (p < 0.001). The Bland-Altman plot for the de Klaver method showed no proportional bias. Additionally, 49% of patients required a dose adjustment during maintenance therapy. CONCLUSIONS: The de Klaver model was able to provide less bias than the Ternant model and may aid in predicting serum adalimumab concentrations. Approximately half of the patients required dose adjustment during maintenance therapy to obtain a therapeutic drug concentration or achieve clinical remission.

6.
Am J Health Syst Pharm ; 80(11): 678-686, 2023 05 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36857752

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to validate the Stanford Professional Fulfillment Index (PFI) for assessment of burnout and professional fulfillment in a study population of pharmacy residents and residency preceptors. SUMMARY: The historical gold standard for assessing professional burnout is the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI); there is no established standard for professional fulfillment. The PFI is a 16-question assessment that has previously been validated in medical residents and practicing physicians. In this study, surveys including both PFI and MBI items were sent to active pharmacy residents and residency preceptors. To determine concurrent validity, domains of the PFI were compared to the closest related MBI domain as well as composite burnout rates measured in each portion of the survey. A total of 142 preceptors and 68 residents completed both the PFI and a version of the MBI previously validated in physicians. In assessing indicators of pharmacist burnout and fulfillment, data captured by domains of the PFI closely correlated with data captured by corresponding domains of the MBI (Pearson correlations of 0.683-0.822), with high internal consistency (Cronbach α of 0.866-0.903). CONCLUSION: The PFI is a valid method of assessing burnout in both pharmacy residents and residency preceptors. Additionally, the PFI contributes a reliable system of assessing professional fulfillment while also being highly accessible for both research and residency program monitoring applications.


Subject(s)
Burnout, Professional , Pharmacy , Physicians , Humans , Surveys and Questionnaires , Burnout, Psychological , Burnout, Professional/diagnosis , Burnout, Professional/epidemiology
7.
Am J Health Syst Pharm ; 80(1): e23-e28, 2023 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36165085

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Chronic disease state management utilizing pharmacists improves quality metrics, allows providers to focus on acute issues, and decreases physician burnout risk. Minimal data exist on pharmacist panel size and its impact. This study aimed to determine appropriate pharmacist panel size based on workload, quality metrics, and patient access. METHODS: This study was a retrospective, multiclinic cohort analysis of patients with diabetes managed by pharmacists at 7 outpatient clinics. The primary objective calculated panel size per full-time equivalent (FTE) utilizing the National Health Interview Survey. Secondary objectives calculated the ideal FTE based on provider to pharmacist ratio and determined the impact of pharmacist panel size on patient access and quality metrics. RESULTS: A total of 4,399 patients were analyzed from 2017 through 2019, with age (range, 57.4 to 62.6 years), sex (52.5% to 63.5% female), race (41.2% to 93.7% African American), insurance type (13.3% to 41% Medicaid), and mean number of medications (13.1 to 20.3) significantly different between sites. Primary outcome results showed that actual panel sizes were less than calculated. However, secondary outcomes indicated that each site was understaffed (actual 0.2 to 0.5 FTE vs calculated 2.52 to 7.34 FTEs) and overbooked (95% to 122% capacity, 17 to 54.2 days for time to third next available appointment). Patients met the composite quality metric 35.1% to 56.3% of the time across sites. CONCLUSION: This study supports the use of patient access data to determine appropriate pharmacist panel size. Utilizing provider panel size to pharmacist ratio and time to third next available appointment is preferable for determining appropriate pharmacist panel size. Further research is needed to evaluate return times to help determine an ideal pharmacist panel size.


Subject(s)
Benchmarking , Pharmacists , Humans , Female , Middle Aged , Male , Retrospective Studies , Ambulatory Care/methods , Primary Health Care
8.
Int J Pharm Compd ; 26(3): 242-247, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35657747

ABSTRACT

Nonsterile compounding is essential to meeting the individualized drug therapy needs of patients. While compounding education is a required component of Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) curricula, student training varies notably in scope, duration, and assessment across programs. Variations in training, coupled with a potential lack of emphasis on the importance of nonsterile compounding, may impact pharmacy students' interest in nonsterile compounding, their perceptions of its importance in pharmacy practice, and their pursuit of compounding careers. The objective of this study was to assess pharmacy student exposure to nonsterile compounding and determine its impact on their perceptions of nonsterile compounding and its applicability to their future careers. Faculty members at colleges and schools of pharmacy within the U.S. were asked to distribute cross-sectional surveys to pharmacy students in the Class of 2022. Surveys collected demographic information and addressed the following: nonsterile compounding experience; exposure to nonsterile compounding within PharmD curricula; and perceptions and expectations of nonsterile compounding. Tests of associations between nominally measured and ordinally measured survey questions were performed via Pearson chi-square tests. Associations between two ordinally measured questions were performed via Kendall's tau tests. In total, 252 students completed the survey. Numerous factors were associated with student perceptions and expectations of nonsterile compounding, including paid work experience in a compounding pharmacy, the number of semesters inclusive of nonsterile compounding education, and the perceived quality of didactic and experiential training in nonsterile compounding. It is imperative that pharmacy students receive nonsterile compounding education that not only ensures appropriate skill development but instills confidence and emphasizes the vital role of compounding pharmacists in patient care. Additional research is needed to determine how best to optimize compounding education to ensure students have sufficient exposure and opportunity for skill development and assessment.


Subject(s)
Education, Pharmacy , Students, Pharmacy , Cross-Sectional Studies , Curriculum , Drug Compounding , Humans , Pharmacists , Surveys and Questionnaires
9.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35042753

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Does rural status influence glycemic outcomes among participants in the type 1 diabetes T1D Exchange clinic registry? RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Data from the T1D Exchange clinic registry between January 2016 and March 2018 were identified by rural-urban status and stratified by age and hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c). Multivariable regression modeling was performed to isolate HbA1c differences. A full model including all significant (p<0.05 via two-sided testing) differential factors was determined with an additional indicator for rural status, and adjusted for duration of diabetes, use of continuous glucose monitoring device, age, race/ethnicity, and private insurance status. The model was reduced using backwards elimination stepwise procedures until only significant factors remained. RESULTS: Mean HbA1c levels for all rural participants were significantly higher (8.71%; 72 mmol/mol) compared with the urban group (8.48%; 69 mmol/mol), p<0.001. For youth under 13 years of age, rural participants had a higher mean HbA1c (8.65%; 71 mmol/mol) compared with urban (8.45% 69 mmol/mol), p=0.022. Rural youth (13-<18 years) had a higher mean HbA1c (9.39%; 79 mmol/mol) than urban youth (9.14%; 76 mmol/mol), p<0.001. Rural young adults (18-<26 years) had a higher mean HbA1c (9.07%; 76 mmol/mol) than urban young adults (8.88%; 74 mmol/mol), p=0.042. Rural adults (≥26 years; n=589) were the only group that did not have a higher mean HbA1c (7.76%, 61.3 mmol) than urban adults (n=4770; 7.72%, 60.9 mmol/mol), p=0.503. Rural locale was highly significant (beta=0.175, p<0.001) despite controlling for potentially confounding differences between rural and urban groups. CONCLUSIONS: Among this T1D Exchange cohort, there is a pattern of higher mean HbA1c being associated with rural status, even after adjustment for characteristic differences, most strikingly among those under 26 years of age. This disparity and contributing factors need to be more thoroughly studied to provide effective solutions.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 , Adolescent , Blood Glucose , Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring , Cohort Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/epidemiology , Humans , Registries , Young Adult
10.
J Trauma Nurs ; 28(4): 275-280, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34210949

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Rates of mass casualty incidents (MCIs) have been on the rise in the United States, highlighting the need for health care systems to have an emergency response plan. Trauma centers are fundamental during MCIs and serve a crucial leadership role in preparedness for them. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to describe the design and implementation of simulated MCI drills at an American College of Surgeons verified Level I trauma center in the Midwest. METHODS: A quasi-experimental time-series design was utilized to determine MCI simulation effects on staff performance using an emergency department checklist to measure emergency department throughput time. A multidisciplinary MCI design team developed a checklist for the emergency department, which identified tasks required to complete it. The 16-item checklist, Critical Pathway Management methodology, was used to identify the critical pathway for patient throughput during a surge. Two in situ MCI simulation drills were conducted in the emergency department (October and December 2019), and Critical Pathway Management identified the primary patient throughput rate limiters as notification and inpatient nursing staff presentation. RESULTS: Emergency department throughput decreased from a mean of 15 to 11 min (reduction of 26.7%) between the two time periods after focusing on rate-limiting tasks. CONCLUSION: This quality improvement project demonstrated that the use of institution-specific checklists and Critical Pathway Management to identify critical pathways and potential rate limiters led to patient throughput improvements.


Subject(s)
Mass Casualty Incidents , Critical Pathways , Disaster Planning , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Trauma Centers , United States
11.
J Trauma Nurs ; 28(2): 119-125, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33667207

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Similar to the significant rise in the geriatric population in the United States, trauma centers have seen an increase in geriatric trauma patients. These patients present with additional challenges such as a higher likelihood of undertriage, mortality, and frailty. In addition, the varying presence of advanced directive documentation increases the importance of early palliative care consultations for geriatric trauma patients. OBJECTIVE: In 2018, a Level I trauma center in the Midwest reviewed the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Program's Palliative Care Best Practice Guideline to identify opportunities for improvement to strengthen the collaboration between the palliative care consult service and trauma program. METHODS: The guideline drove improvements, which included documentation changes (i.e., expansion of palliative care consultation triggers, frailty assessment, advanced directives questions, depression screening, and addition of palliative care consultation section on the performance improvement program form) and training (1-hr lecture on palliative care and 5-hr palliative care simulation training) opportunities. RESULTS: A 3-month manual chart review (March 2019 through May 2019) revealed that by May 2019, 87.2% of admitted geriatric trauma patients received frailty assessments, which surpassed the benchmark (≥85%). In addition, advanced care planning questions (i.e., health care power of attorney, do not resuscitate order, or living will) exceeded the benchmarks set forth by the guideline (≥90%), with all of the questions being asked and documented in 95.7% of those same patient charts by May 2019. CONCLUSION: This quality improvement project has applicability for trauma centers that treat geriatric trauma patients; using the guidelines can drive changes to meet individual institution needs.


Subject(s)
Frailty , Trauma Centers , Trauma Nursing , Aged , Humans , Palliative Care , Program Development , Quality Improvement , United States
12.
Telemed J E Health ; 27(7): 755-762, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33090088

ABSTRACT

Background: The events of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic forced the world to adopt telemedicine frameworks to comply with isolation and stay-at-home regulations. Telemedicine, in various forms, has been used by patients and medical professionals for quite some time, especially telepsychiatry. To examine the efficacy and role of telesimulation as a method to educate health sciences students via telepresence robots. The study recruited students from the above health science disciplines. All participants were trained to administer a contextual interview to a standardized patient (SP) for mental health concerns. Methods: The completion of the contextual interview observation form adult (CIOF-A), National Aeronautics and Space Administration Task Load Index, self-efficacy in patient centeredness questionnaire (SEPCQ), and communication skills attitude scale with or without a telepresence robot. All participants completed baseline metrics and were trained to conduct a contextual interview to an SP. Researchers block-randomized the participants to either the telepresence robot group (TP) or in-person (IP) group. Results: The study recruited n = 43 participants to the IP group (n = 21) or TP group (n = 22). Mean participant demographics of age were 25.3 (±1.9) years in the IP group and 24.3 (±2.1) years for the TP group. Mean and standard deviation scores with effect sizes in CIOF-A scores IP: 0.05 (±1.91) and TP: -0.45 (±1.71), Cohen's d = 0.28; SEPCQ-Patient Domain scores IP: 0.42 (±4.69) and TP: 0.50 (±7.18), Cohen's d = 0.01; change in SEPCQ-Sharing Domain scores IP: 0.53 (±5.10) and TP: 0.91 (±9.98), Cohen's d = 0.05. These effect sizes will inform future studies and appropriate sample sizes. Conclusion: These data indicate that health sciences students utilizing a telepresence robot in an SP scenario to perform a behavioral health screening felt as comfortable and competent as those health sciences students performing the same behavioral health screening in person. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03661372.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Robotics , Telemedicine , Adult , Educational Status , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Young Adult
13.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 84(9): ajpe7749, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33012791

ABSTRACT

Objective. To examine the relationship between class attendance by Doctor of Pharmacy students and their performance on pharmacotherapy examinations within an active-learning classroom model. Methods. Second-year pharmacy students enrolled in a pharmacotherapy course series were included in the study (N=160). Class attendance was taken manually by members of the study team over a one-year study period (fall 2017 and spring 2018 semesters). Course attendance was not required and had no direct impact on student grades. Scores from the six competency-based examinations and overall course grades for each semester course, respectively, were then linked to class attendance records. Two additional examination attempts (retake and extended learning experience) were administered to students who did not receive a score of at least 80% on the initial exam or retake exam, respectively. Results. Class attendance was documented during 48 class sessions. Of the six examinations given each semester, students required an average of 1 retake of the examination during the fall semester and 1.5 retakes in the spring semester. A significant negative correlation was found in both courses between students missing more classes and receiving a lower final course grade. For each missed class session, there was a reduction in overall course grade of 0.18% and 0.14% in the fall and spring courses, respectively. Conclusion. Regular class attendance by pharmacy students enrolled in an active-learning pharmacotherapy curriculum was associated with higher scores on examinations. The results of this study illustrate the importance of attending active-learning sessions to attain higher examination scores. Further research is needed to determine whether class attendance is associated with students' improved ability to apply pharmacotherapy concepts.


Subject(s)
Absenteeism , Drug Therapy , Education, Pharmacy , Educational Measurement , Problem-Based Learning , Students, Pharmacy , Curriculum , Humans
14.
J Med Educ Curric Dev ; 7: 2382120520925061, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32656357

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Recently, the American College of Graduate Medical Education included medical decision-making as a core competency in several specialties. To date, the ability to demonstrate and measure a pedagogical evolution of medical judgment in a medical education program has been limited. In this study, we aim to examine differences in medical decision-making of physician groups in distinctly different stages of their postgraduate career. METHODS: The study recruited physicians with a wide spectrum of disciplines and levels of experience to take part in 4 medical simulations divided into 2 categories, abdominal pain (biliary colic [BC] and renal colic [RC]) or chest pain (cardiac ischemia with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction [STEMI] and pneumothorax [PTX]). Evaluation of medical decision-making used the Medical Judgment Metric (MJM). The targeted selection criteria for the physician groups are administrative physicians (APs), representing those with the most experience but whose current duties are largely administrative; resident physicians (RPs), those enrolled in postgraduate medical or surgical training; and mastery level physicians (MPs), those deemed to have mastery level experience. The study measured participant demographics, physiological responses, medical judgment scores, and simulation time to case resolution. Outcome differences were analyzed using Fisher exact tests with post hoc Bonferroni-adjusted z tests and single-factor analysis of variance F tests with post hoc Tukey honestly significant difference, as appropriate. The significance threshold was set at P < .05. Effect sizes were determined and reported to inform future studies. RESULTS: A total of n = 30 physicians were recruited for the study with n = 10 participants in each physician group. No significant differences were found in baseline demographics between groups. Analysis of simulations showed a significant (P = .002) interaction for total simulation time between groups RP: 6.2 minutes (±1.58); MP: 8.7 minutes (±2.46); and AP: 10.3 minutes (±2.78). The AP MJM scores, 12.3 (±2.66), for the RC simulation were significantly (P = .010) lower than the RP 14.7 (±1.15) and MP 14.7 (±1.15) MJM scores. Analysis of simulated patient outcomes showed that the AP group was significantly less likely to stabilize the participant in the RC simulation than MP and RP groups (P = .040). While not significant, all MJM scores for the AP group were lower in the BC, STEMI, and PTX simulations compared with the RP and MP groups. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians in distinctly different stages of their respective postgraduate career differed in several domains when assessed through a consistent high-fidelity medical simulation program. Further studies are warranted to accurately assess pedagogical differences over the medical judgment lifespan of a physician.

15.
Crit Care Res Pract ; 2020: 4647958, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32695507

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: With the regionalization of specialty care, there is an increasing need for interfacility transport from local to regional hospitals. There are very limited data on rates of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) during medical transport and relationship between transport-specific factors, such as transport program type and need of CPR during transport of critically ill patients. We present the first, multicenter, international report of CPR during medical transport using the large Ground and Air Medical qUality Transport (GAMUT) database. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the GAMUT database from January 2014 to March 2017 for CPR during transport. We determined the overall CPR rate and CPR rates for adult, pediatric, and neonatal transport programs. The rate of CPR per total transports was expressed as percentage, and then, Spearman's rho nonparametric associations were determined between CPR and other quality metrics tracked in the GAMUT database. Examples include advanced airway presence, waveform capnography usage, average mobilization time from the start of referral until en route, 1st attempt intubation success rate, and DASH1A intubation success (definitive airway sans hypoxia/hypotension on 1st attempt). Data were analyzed using chi-square tests, and in the presence of overall significance, post hoc Bonferroni adjusted z tests were performed. RESULTS: There were 72 programs that had at least one CPR event during the study period. The overall CPR rate was 0.42% (777 CPR episodes/184,272 patient contacts) from 115 programs reporting transport volume and CPR events from the GAMUT database during the study period. Adult, pediatric, and neonatal transport programs (n = 57, 40 and 16, respectively) had significantly different CPR rates (P < 0.001) i.e., 0.68% (555/82,094), 0.18% (138/76,430), and 0.33% (73/21,823), respectively. Presence of an advanced airway and mobilization time was significantly associated with CPR episodes (P < 0.001) (Rs = +0.41 and Rs = -0.60, respectively). Other transport quality metrics such as waveform capnography, first attempt intubation, and DASH1A success rate were not significantly associated with CPR episodes. CONCLUSION: The overall CPR rate during medical transport is 0.42%. Adult, pediatric, and neonatal program types have significantly different overall rates of CPR. Presence of advanced airway and mobilization time had an association with the rate of CPR during transport.

16.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol ; 41(10): 1225-1227, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32484116

ABSTRACT

Antimicrobial stewardship of anti-infectives prescribed upon hospital discharge was implemented to improve the rate of appropriate prescribing at discharge. Appropriate prescribing significantly improved from 47.5% to 85.2% (P < .001), antimicrobial days of therapy decreased, and 30-day readmission rates decreased. Discharge antimicrobial stewardship was effective in improving anti-infective prescribing practices.


Subject(s)
Antimicrobial Stewardship , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Hospitals , Humans , Patient Discharge , Patient Readmission
18.
BMJ Simul Technol Enhanc Learn ; 6(6): 344-350, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35515493

ABSTRACT

Introduction: One critical aspect of successful simulation facilitation is development of written scenarios. However, there are no validated assessment tools dedicated to the evaluation of written simulation scenarios available. Our aim was to develop a tool to evaluate the quality of written simulation demonstrating content validity. Methods: A comprehensive literature search did not yield a validated assessment tool dedicated for the evaluation of written simulation scenarios. A subsequent search yielded six templates published for written simulation scenario design. From these templates, critical scenario elements were identified to create an evaluation instrument with six components of scenario quality with corresponding anchors and rating scale. Subsequently, a national group of simulation experts were engaged via survey methodology to rate the content of the proposed instrument. Ultimately, a modified two-round Delphi approach was implemented to demonstrate consensus of the final assessment tool. Results: 38 responses were obtained in round 1, while 22 complete responses were obtained in round 2. Round 1 kappa values ranged from 0.44 to 1.0, indicating moderate to almost perfect rater agreement for inclusion of the six proposed components. Kappa values specifically regarding scale and anchors ranged from 0 to 0.49. After revisions, there was a significant level of agreement (p<0.05) of all items of the proposed assessment tool in the second-round survey except for item 10. Of note, all initial respondents indicated that they had never evaluated written scenarios with an assessment tool. Conclusions: The Simulation Scenario Evaluation Tool, developed using a national consensus of content experts, is an instrument demonstrating content validity that assesses the quality of written simulation scenarios. This tool provides a basis to guide structured feedback regarding the quality of written simulation scenarios.

19.
Medicine (Baltimore) ; 98(44): e17723, 2019 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31689811

ABSTRACT

Current surgical options for treating genu varum in achondroplasia include tibial and fibular osteotomy and growth modulation using plates and screws. However, a single surgeon consistently treated genu varum using a planned fibular nonunion (PFN). The purpose of this study is to describe his surgical technique and report radiographic and clinical outcomes for the cohort studied.This is an observational retrospective review. The cohort studied included patients with achondroplasia who had PFN surgery for the treatment of genu varum at a young age (<13 years) and was followed through to skeletal maturity. The surgery included meticulous closure of the periosteum over the remaining fibula. The surgery was considered a success if the patient did not require subsequent surgery and had acceptable or improved clinical alignment. Radiographic measures used to determine change in genu varum included the anatomic tibio-femoral angle (aTFA), tibia varus, and tibia-fibula ratio. Clinically, changes in lower limb alignment were defined using a plumb line and 6 categories of alignment ranging from extreme varus to valgus. Statistics were used to validate the plumb line categorization to available radiographic measures. Other appropriate statistical methods were used with P < .05 considered significant.Of the 53 PFN cases (27 patients) included in the study, 34 (64%) did not require subsequent surgery and had acceptable or improved alignment. The average age at surgery and follow-up was 6.1 and 17.0 years, respectively. For the 37 limbs (19 patients) with available radiographs, pre- and post-surgery radiographic measures significantly improved including aTFA (3° varus to 2° valgus, P = .003), tibia varus (2° varus to 3° valgus, P = .004), and the tibia-fibula ratio (0.977 to 1.013, P < .001). Clinically, 32 cases (60%) demonstrated significant improvement by translating into an improved alignment and 9 (17%) remained the same (P < .01). Complications were minimal and insignificant. Failures were readily managed by tibia-fibular osteotomies in adolescence and at maturity.PFN for the treatment of genu varum in young achondroplasia patients significantly improved radiographic and clinical measures of lower limb alignment through skeletal maturity with relatively few complications.


Subject(s)
Achondroplasia/complications , Genu Varum/surgery , Osteotomy/methods , Periosteum/surgery , Achondroplasia/diagnostic imaging , Adolescent , Age Determination by Skeleton , Child , Female , Fibula/diagnostic imaging , Fibula/surgery , Genu Varum/diagnostic imaging , Genu Varum/etiology , Humans , Male , Periosteum/diagnostic imaging , Radiography , Retrospective Studies , Tibia/diagnostic imaging , Tibia/surgery , Treatment Outcome
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