Chisholm Carey D, Whenmouth Laura F, Daly Elizabeth A, Cordell William H, Giles Beverly K, Brizendine Edward J
Department of Emergency Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46206, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2004 Feb;11(2):149-55.
To measure actual emergency medicine (EM) resident interaction time with faculty and to investigate the potential to use direct observation as an assessment tool for the core competencies. By 2006 all EM residencies must implement resident assessment techniques of the six Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education core competencies. Emergency medicine educators recommend direct observation as the optimal evaluation tool for patient care, systems-based practice, interpersonal and communication skills, and professionalism. Continuous faculty presence in the emergency department (ED) is widely believed to facilitate direct observation as an assessment technique.
Observational study of EM resident-faculty interaction time during two-hour periods. Study venues included two EDs, two trauma services, inpatient medicine, adult and pediatric intensive care units (ICUs), and a pediatric outpatient clinic. Using a priori definitions, the authors categorized faculty-EM resident interaction time as direct observation of patient care, indirect patient care, or non-patient care activities, and calculated total faculty interaction time. Subjects were blinded to the nature of the study, and data gathering was encrypted.
Two hundred seventy observation periods of two hours each were conducted, sampling 32 EMR1, 33 EMR2-3, 41 EM, and 38 non-EM faculty. The mean total faculty interaction time ranged from a high of 30% (95% CI = 20% to 41%) in the pediatric ICU to a low of 10% (95% CI = 3% to 16%) on internal medicine wards. Overall, EM faculty interaction time was 20% (95% CI = 18% to 22%). Direct observation by faculty ranged from a high of 6% for EMR2-3s in the critical care areas of the ED (95% CI = 3% to 9%) to a low of 1% (95% CI = 0% to 2%) on internal medicine wards. Overall ED direct observation time was 3.6% (95% CI = 2.6% to 4.7%). Emergency department direct observation did not vary within EM resident training level or by ED site. Direct observation varied by treatment area within the EDs, with the critical care areas being substantially higher (6%) than the noncritical care areas (1%).
Faculty direct observation time of EM residents was low in all training venues studied. Direct observation was the highest in ED critical care areas and lowest on medicine ward rotations. Emergency medicine faculty involved simultaneously in routine ED teaching, supervision, and patient care rarely performed direct observation, despite their continuous physical presence. This finding suggests that alternative strategies may be required to assess core competencies through direct observation in the ED.
测量急诊医学(EM)住院医师与教员的实际互动时间,并研究将直接观察用作核心能力评估工具的可能性。到2006年,所有急诊医学住院医师培训项目都必须实施针对医学研究生教育认证委员会六项核心能力的住院医师评估技术。急诊医学教育工作者推荐直接观察作为患者护理、基于系统的实践、人际沟通技能和职业素养的最佳评估工具。人们普遍认为,教员持续驻留在急诊科(ED)有助于将直接观察作为一种评估技术。
对急诊医学住院医师与教员在两小时时间段内的互动时间进行观察性研究。研究地点包括两个急诊科、两个创伤服务科室、内科住院部、成人及儿科重症监护病房(ICU)以及一个儿科门诊。作者根据预先定义,将教员与急诊医学住院医师的互动时间分为对患者护理的直接观察、间接患者护理或非患者护理活动,并计算教员的总互动时间。研究对象对研究性质不知情,数据收集进行了加密。
共进行了270个每次两小时的观察时间段,对32名急诊医学一年级住院医师(EMR1)、33名急诊医学二年级至三年级住院医师(EMR2 - 3)、41名急诊医学教员以及38名非急诊医学教员进行了抽样。教员的平均总互动时间范围从儿科ICU的30%(95%置信区间 = 20%至41%)的高位到内科病房的10%(95%置信区间 = 3%至16%)的低位。总体而言,急诊医学教员的互动时间为20%(95%置信区间 = 18%至22%)。教员的直接观察范围从急诊科重症监护区域中急诊医学二年级至三年级住院医师的6%(95%置信区间 = 3%至9%)的高位到内科病房的1%(95%置信区间 = 0%至2%)的低位。急诊科的总体直接观察时间为3.6%(95%置信区间 = 2.6%至4.7%)。急诊科的直接观察在急诊医学住院医师培训水平或急诊科地点方面没有差异。直接观察在急诊科的不同治疗区域有所不同,重症监护区域显著高于非重症监护区域(分别为6%和1%)。
在所研究的所有培训地点,教员对急诊医学住院医师的直接观察时间都很低。直接观察在急诊科重症监护区域最高,在内科病房轮转时最低。尽管急诊医学教员持续在场,但同时参与急诊科常规教学、监督和患者护理的教员很少进行直接观察。这一发现表明,可能需要采用其他策略来通过在急诊科的直接观察评估核心能力。