Windish Donna M, Reed Darcy A, Boonyasai Romsai T, Chakraborti Chayan, Bass Eric B
Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Acad Med. 2009 Dec;84(12):1677-92. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181bfa080.
To systematically determine whether published quality improvement (QI) curricula for physician trainees adhere to QI guidelines and meet standards for study quality in medical education research.
The authors searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and ERIC between 1980 and April 2008 for physician trainee QI curricula and assessed (1) adherence to seven domains containing 35 QI objectives, and (2) study quality using the Medical Education Research Study Quality Instrument (MERSQI).
Eighteen curricula met eligibility criteria; 5 involved medical students and 13 targeted residents. Three curricula (18%) measured health care outcomes. Attitudes about QI were high, and many behavior and patient-related outcomes showed positive results. Curricula addressed a mean of 4.3 (SD 1.8) QI domains. Student initiatives included 38.2% [95% CI, 12.2%-64.2%] beginning student-level objectives and 23.0% [95% CI, -4.0% to 50.0%] advanced student-level objectives. Resident curricula addressed 42.3% [95% CI, 29.8%-54.8%] beginning resident-level objectives and 33.7% [95% CI, 23.2%-44.1%] advanced resident-level objectives. The mean (SD) total MERSQI score was 9.86 (2.92) with a range of 5 of 14 [total possible range 5-18]; 35% of curricula demonstrated lower study quality (MERSQI score < or = 7). Curricula varied widely in quality of reporting, teaching strategies, evaluation instruments, and funding obtained.
Many QI curricula in this study inadequately addressed QI educational objectives and had relatively weak research quality. Educators seeking to improve QI curricula should use recommended curricular and reporting guidelines, stronger methodologic rigor through development and use of validated instruments, available QI resources already present in health care settings, and outside funding opportunities.
系统地确定已发表的针对医师培训学员的质量改进(QI)课程是否符合QI指南,并达到医学教育研究中的研究质量标准。
作者检索了1980年至2008年4月期间的MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL和ERIC数据库,查找针对医师培训学员的QI课程,并评估(1)对包含35个QI目标的七个领域的遵循情况,以及(2)使用医学教育研究质量工具(MERSQI)评估研究质量。
18个课程符合纳入标准;5个涉及医学生,13个针对住院医师。三个课程(18%)测量了医疗保健结果。对QI的态度较高,许多行为和与患者相关的结果显示出积极结果。课程平均涉及4.3(标准差1.8)个QI领域。学生项目包括38.2%[95%置信区间,12.2%-64.2%]的初级学生水平目标和23.0%[95%置信区间,-4.0%至50.0%]的高级学生水平目标。住院医师课程涉及42.3%[95%置信区间,29.8%-54.8%]的初级住院医师水平目标和33.7%[95%置信区间,23.2%-44.1%]的高级住院医师水平目标。MERSQI总得分的平均值(标准差)为9.86(2.92),范围为14分中的5分[总可能范围为5-18];35%的课程研究质量较低(MERSQI得分≤7)。课程在报告质量、教学策略、评估工具和获得资金方面差异很大。
本研究中的许多QI课程未充分涵盖QI教育目标,研究质量相对较弱。寻求改进QI课程的教育工作者应使用推荐的课程和报告指南,通过开发和使用经过验证的工具提高方法学严谨性,利用医疗保健环境中现有的可用QI资源以及外部资金机会。