Holmes James F, Sokolove Peter E, Panacek Edward A
Department of Emergency Medicine, UC Davis School of Medicine , Sacramento, CA, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2006 May;13(5):575-9. doi: 10.1197/j.aem.2005.12.016. Epub 2006 Mar 28.
Controversy exists regarding the value and quality of required emergency medicine (EM) resident scholarly projects.
To describe the research designs and presentation rate at national scientific meetings and the publication rate of EM resident scholarly projects at a university-based residency program.
The authors reviewed the initial ten years (1993-2002) of resident scholarly projects from an EM residency program. Since the inception of the program, a formal research study has been required of all residents for residency graduation. Scholarly projects were reviewed and categorized by study design. Abstracts from the American Academy of Emergency Medicine (AAEM), American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP), and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) annual meetings were searched to identify projects presented at any of these national meetings. A PubMed search for resident and faculty investigators was performed, and faculty and graduated residents were queried to identify all resident scholarly projects published in peer-reviewed journals.
Eighty-seven residents produced 90 scholarly projects. Study designs were prospective data collection, 42 (47%); retrospective chart review, 38 (42%); survey, 5 (6%); animal, 4 (4%); and computer program development, 1 (1%). Of the 80 projects collecting patient data, 72 were conducted at a single center; 6, at two centers; and 2, at five centers each. Of the 42 prospective clinical studies, 27 (64%) were observational and 15 (36%) were interventional. Forty-six (51%) abstracts were presented at national meetings (SAEM, 20; ACEP, 19; AAEM, 3; and other, 4). Thirty-six (40%) of the projects have been published in peer-reviewed journals. Abstract presentation at national meetings (range, 13%-64% of projects per yr) and manuscript publication rates (range, 0-67% of projects per yr) were variable from year to year.
Resident scholarly projects at one institution were equally likely to use a prospective or retrospective design, and most were conducted at a single center. More than half of the projects were presented at national research meetings, and more than a third were subsequently developed into manuscripts and published in peer-reviewed journals. When an original research study is required for satisfying the scholarly requirement for EM residency graduation, resident projects can contribute to the EM literature.
关于急诊医学(EM)住院医师学术项目的价值和质量存在争议。
描述在一个以大学为基础的住院医师培训项目中,急诊医学住院医师学术项目在全国科学会议上的研究设计和报告率以及发表率。
作者回顾了一个急诊医学住院医师培训项目最初十年(1993 - 2002年)的住院医师学术项目。自该项目启动以来,所有住院医师为了完成住院医师培训都需要进行一项正式的研究。学术项目根据研究设计进行审查和分类。检索了美国急诊医学学会(AAEM)、美国急诊医师学院(ACEP)和学术急诊医学协会(SAEM)年会的摘要,以确定在这些全国性会议上展示的项目。对PubMed上的住院医师和教员研究者进行了搜索,并询问教员和已毕业的住院医师,以确定所有在同行评审期刊上发表的住院医师学术项目。
87名住院医师完成了90个学术项目。研究设计包括前瞻性数据收集,42项(47%);回顾性病历审查,38项(42%);调查,5项(6%);动物实验,4项(4%);以及计算机程序开发,1项(1%)。在收集患者数据的80个项目中,72项在单个中心进行;6项在两个中心进行;2项分别在五个中心进行。在42项前瞻性临床研究中,27项(64%)为观察性研究,15项(36%)为干预性研究。46项(51%)摘要在全国性会议上展示(SAEM,20项;ACEP,19项;AAEM,3项;其他,4项)。36项(40%)项目已在同行评审期刊上发表。每年在全国性会议上的摘要展示率(范围为每年项目的13% - 64%)和稿件发表率(范围为每年项目的0 - 67%)各不相同。
一个机构的住院医师学术项目同样可能采用前瞻性或回顾性设计,并且大多数在单个中心进行。超过一半的项目在全国性研究会议上展示,超过三分之一随后被撰写成稿件并在同行评审期刊上发表。当需要原创性研究来满足急诊医学住院医师培训的学术要求时,住院医师项目可为急诊医学文献做出贡献。