Brown Angel T, Kolade Victor O, Staton Lisa J, Patel Neha K
Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, USA.
Tenn Med. 2013 Mar;106(3):31-3.
More than 22 million Americans are living with addiction, including nearly seven million who misuse prescription medications. However, most medical schools and residency programs provide little to no education addressing alcohol and drug addiction. Implementation of a new addiction medicine curriculum at a single internal medicine program provided an opportunity for knowledge assessment in a select population of health professionals. We hypothesized that knowledge of addiction medicine would not differ by training level or geographical location of medical school, but that knowledge would improve following a structured curriculum.
Study participants included internal medicine and transitional year residents, as well as a group of medical students who were enrolled in a single internal medicine program at the time of the didactic series. A pre-test was administered prior to a four-week structured curriculum. The topics addressed included but were not limited to: 1) an overview of addiction, 2) opioids and chronic pain, 3) benzodiazepines and illicit stimulants, and 4) alcohol. A panel discussion was convened at the end of the fourth session. Following participation in the symposium, participants completed an online post-test. ANOVA was used to compare means. Paired t-tests were used to compare pre-test and post-test scores.
36 of 44 eligible medical students and residents completed the pre-test. Mean pre-test percentage scores were 64 percent for fourth year medical students and 62.5 percent for all residents. For residents, U.S. medical school trainees answered 65 percent of the pre-test questions correctly, versus 58.6 percent correct responses among their international medical graduate peers. No inter-group differences were statistically significant. Of the 36 participants, 20 completed both pre-tests and post-tests. The mean post-test score of 68.75 percent was higher than the mean pre-test score of 61.75 percent, p = 0.009.
Knowledge of addiction medicine can be improved for medical students and residents in an academic medicine department. Significant improvements were observed following completion of eight hours of interactive didactics.
超过2200万美国人患有成瘾症,其中近700万人滥用处方药。然而,大多数医学院校和住院医师培训项目几乎没有提供关于酒精和药物成瘾的教育。在一个内科项目中实施新的成瘾医学课程,为在特定健康专业人群中进行知识评估提供了机会。我们假设,成瘾医学知识不会因医学院校的培训水平或地理位置而有所不同,但在结构化课程之后知识会有所提高。
研究参与者包括内科和过渡年住院医师,以及在教学系列课程期间就读于一个内科项目的一组医学生。在为期四周的结构化课程之前进行了预测试。涉及的主题包括但不限于:1)成瘾概述,2)阿片类药物与慢性疼痛,3)苯二氮卓类药物与非法兴奋剂,4)酒精。在第四节课结束时召开了小组讨论。参加研讨会后,参与者完成了在线后测。采用方差分析比较均值。配对t检验用于比较预测试和后测试分数。
44名符合条件的医学生和住院医师中有36人完成了预测试。四年级医学生的预测试平均百分比分数为64%,所有住院医师为62.5%。对于住院医师,美国医学院校的受训者预测试问题的正确回答率为65%,而国际医学毕业生同行的正确回答率为58.6%。组间差异无统计学意义。36名参与者中,20人完成了预测试和后测试。后测试平均分数68.75%高于预测试平均分数61.75%,p = 0.009。
学术医学部门的医学生和住院医师对成瘾医学的知识可以得到提高。在完成八小时的互动教学后,观察到有显著改善。