Lamba Sangeeta, Wilson Bryan, Natal Brenda, Nagurka Roxanne, Anana Michael, Sule Harsh
Department of Emergency Medicine, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ, USA.
Adv Med Educ Pract. 2016 Mar 1;7:115-24. doi: 10.2147/AMEP.S97106. eCollection 2016.
An increasing number of students rank Emergency Medicine (EM) as a top specialty choice, requiring medical schools to provide adequate exposure to EM. The Core Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) for Entering Residency by the Association of American Medical Colleges combined with the Milestone Project for EM residency training has attempted to standardize the undergraduate and graduate medical education goals. However, it remains unclear as to how the EPAs correlate to the milestones, and who owns the process of ensuring that an entering EM resident has competency at a certain minimum level. Recent trends establishing specialty-specific boot camps prepare students for residency and address the variability of skills of students coming from different medical schools.
Our project's goal was therefore to perform a needs assessment to inform the design of an EM boot camp curriculum. Toward this goal, we 1) mapped the core EPAs for graduating medical students to the EM residency Level 1 milestones in order to identify the possible gaps/needs and 2) conducted a pilot procedure workshop that was designed to address some of the identified gaps/needs in procedural skills.
In order to inform the curriculum of an EM boot camp, we used a systematic approach to 1) identify gaps between the EPAs and EM milestones (Level 1) and 2) determine what essential and supplemental competencies/skills an incoming EM resident should ideally possess. We then piloted a 1-day, three-station advanced ABCs procedure workshop based on the identified needs. A pre-workshop test and survey assessed knowledge, preparedness, confidence, and perceived competence. A post-workshop survey evaluated the program, and a posttest combined with psychomotor skills test using three simulation cases assessed students' skills.
Students (n=9) reported increased confidence in the following procedures: intubation (1.5-2.1), thoracostomy (1.1-1.9), and central venous catheterization (1.3-2) (a three-point Likert-type scale, with 1= not yet confident/able to perform with supervision to 3= confident/able to perform without supervision). Psychomotor skills testing showed on average, 26% of students required verbal prompting with performance errors, 48% with minor performance errors, and 26% worked independently without performance errors. All participants reported: 1) increased knowledge and confidence in covered topics and 2) overall satisfaction with simulation experience.
Mapping the Core EPAs for Entering Residency to the EM milestones at Level 1 identifies educational gaps for graduating medical students seeking a career in EM. Educators designing EM boot camps for medical students should consider these identified gaps, procedures, and clinical conditions during the development of a core standardized curriculum.
越来越多的学生将急诊医学(EM)列为首选专业,这就要求医学院为学生提供足够的急诊医学接触机会。美国医学院协会制定的住院医师入职核心可托付专业活动(EPA),与急诊医学住院医师培训的里程碑项目相结合,试图规范本科和研究生医学教育目标。然而,目前尚不清楚这些EPA与里程碑之间的关联,以及由谁负责确保即将入职的急诊医学住院医师具备一定的最低水平能力。最近建立特定专业新兵训练营的趋势,是为学生的住院医师培训做准备,并解决来自不同医学院的学生技能差异问题。
因此,我们项目的目标是进行需求评估,为急诊医学新兵训练营课程的设计提供依据。为实现这一目标,我们:1)将医学毕业生的核心EPA与急诊医学住院医师第1级里程碑进行映射,以确定可能存在的差距/需求;2)举办了一个试点程序工作坊,旨在解决已确定的程序技能方面的一些差距/需求。
为了为急诊医学新兵训练营的课程提供依据,我们采用了一种系统的方法:1)确定EPA与急诊医学里程碑(第1级)之间的差距;2)确定即将入职的急诊医学住院医师理想情况下应具备的基本和补充能力/技能。然后,我们根据确定的需求,试点了一个为期1天、设有三个站点的高级ABC程序工作坊。工作坊前的测试和调查评估了知识、准备情况、信心和感知能力。工作坊后的调查对该项目进行了评估,后测结合使用三个模拟案例的操作技能测试评估了学生的技能。
学生(n = 9)报告称在以下操作方面的信心有所增强:插管(1.5 - 2.1)、胸腔穿刺术(1.1 - 1.9)和中心静脉置管(1.3 - 2)(采用三点李克特量表,1 = 尚未有信心/在监督下才能操作,3 = 有信心/无需监督即可操作)。操作技能测试显示,平均而言,26%的学生在操作时有错误需要言语提示,48%的学生有轻微操作错误,26%的学生独立操作且无操作错误。所有参与者均报告:1)在所涵盖的主题方面知识和信心有所增强;2)对模拟体验总体满意。
将住院医师入职核心EPA与急诊医学第1级里程碑进行映射,可识别出寻求急诊医学职业的医学毕业生存在的教育差距。为医学生设计急诊医学新兵训练营的教育工作者,在制定核心标准化课程时应考虑这些已确定的差距、操作程序和临床情况。