Haines Stephen J, Nicholas Joyce S
Departments of Neurological Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2003 Aug;197(2):285-9. doi: 10.1016/S1072-7515(03)00114-5.
Curricula for the teaching of evidence-based medicine to residents have been the subject of reports, analyses, and commentary. Specific programs for teaching evidence-based medicine principles to surgical subspecialty residents have not been identified by the authors. The objective of this article is to report our experience in establishing a teaching program in the principles of evidence-based medicine to surgical subspecialty residents.
We established a teaching program in the principles of evidence-based medicine for neurosurgical residents in a busy neurosurgical training program. Two hours were set aside every other week, replacing traditional professors' rounds with sessions led jointly by a neurosurgeon and an epidemiologist, but based on case presentations from patients currently being treated. From these presentations, searchable clinical questions were developed, and the literature was searched, critically analyzed, and summarized. Results of several cycles on this process are reported.
The group developed a repository of Internet-based resources for evidence-based education and practice. Using these resources, the group analyzed six topics in the first 2 years of the program. These included the "best" way to clinically grade patients after subarachnoid hemmorhage, considerations in the biopsy and treatment of enhancing intracerebral mass lesions in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, the use of prophylactic anticonvulsants in patients with primary brain tumors, the identification of cervical spine injuries in the emergency department, the grading of the fractures of the odontoid process, and the value of removing retained bullets from the spinal canal. The outcomes ranged from finding insufficient evidence to reach a conclusion, through the identification of well-conducted and well-reported critical syntheses of the topic already available in literature, to the development of the detailed algorithm for cervical spine clearance that was accepted by the institution's emergency department.
By dedicating some specific time and using resources readily available in most academic health centers, it is possible to incorporate the teaching of the principles of evidence-based practice into the ongoing education of residents on a busy surgical subspecialty service.
向住院医师传授循证医学的课程一直是报告、分析和评论的主题。作者尚未确定向外科亚专科住院医师传授循证医学原则的具体项目。本文的目的是报告我们在为外科亚专科住院医师建立循证医学原则教学项目方面的经验。
我们在一个繁忙的神经外科培训项目中为神经外科住院医师建立了一个循证医学原则教学项目。每隔一周留出两个小时,用神经外科医生和流行病学家联合主持的课程取代传统的教授查房,但课程基于当前正在治疗的患者的病例报告。从这些报告中,提出可检索的临床问题,并检索、批判性分析和总结文献。报告了该过程几个周期的结果。
该小组开发了一个基于互联网的循证教育和实践资源库。利用这些资源,该小组在该项目的前两年分析了六个主题。这些主题包括蛛网膜下腔出血后对患者进行临床分级的“最佳”方法、获得性免疫缺陷综合征患者强化脑内肿块病变活检和治疗的注意事项、原发性脑肿瘤患者预防性使用抗惊厥药物、急诊科颈椎损伤的识别、齿状突骨折的分级以及从椎管取出残留子弹的价值。结果从发现证据不足无法得出结论,到识别文献中已有的关于该主题的进行良好且报告完善的关键综述,再到制定被该机构急诊科接受的详细颈椎检查算法。
通过投入一些特定时间并利用大多数学术健康中心现成的资源,有可能将循证实践原则的教学纳入繁忙的外科亚专科服务中住院医师的持续教育。