Becker Davida, Garth Hanna, Hollander Rachel, Klein Felice, Klau Marc
Residency Research Director at Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Pasadena.
Educational Consultant at Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Pasadena, and an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, San Diego.
Perm J. 2017;21:16-034. doi: 10.7812/TPP/16-034. Epub 2017 Jan 6.
Graduate medical education (GME) programs must develop curriculum to ensure scholarly activity among trainees and faculty to meet accreditation requirements and to support evidence-based medicine.
Test whether research-related needs and interests varied across four groups: primary care trainees, specialty trainees, primary care faculty, and specialty faculty.
We surveyed a random sample of trainees and faculty in Kaiser Permanente Southern California's GME programs. We investigated group differences in outcomes using Fisher exact and Kruskal-Wallis tests.
Research experiences, skills, barriers, motivators, and interests in specific research skills development.
Participants included 47 trainees and 26 faculty (response rate = 30%). Among primary care faculty, 12 (71%) reported little or no research experience vs 1 (11%) for specialty faculty, 14 (41%) for primary care trainees, and 1 (8%) for specialty trainees (p < 0.001). Submission of research to the institutional review board, an abstract to a conference, or a manuscript for publication in the previous year varied across groups (p = 0.001, p = 0.003, and p < 0.001, respectively). Overall self-reported research skills also differed across groups (p < 0.001). Primary care faculty reported the lowest skill level. Research barriers that differed across groups included other work roles taking priority; desire for work-life balance; and lack of managerial support, research equipment, administrative support, and funding.
Faculty and trainees in primary care and specialties have differing research-related needs that GME programs should consider when designing curricula to support scholarly activity. Developing research skills of primary care faculty is a priority to support trainees' scholarly activity.
毕业后医学教育(GME)项目必须制定课程,以确保学员和教员开展学术活动,以满足认证要求并支持循证医学。
测试四个群体(初级保健学员、专科培训学员、初级保健教员和专科教员)在研究相关需求和兴趣方面是否存在差异。
我们对南加州凯撒医疗集团GME项目中的学员和教员进行了随机抽样调查。我们使用费舍尔精确检验和克鲁斯卡尔-沃利斯检验研究了不同群体在结果上的差异。
研究经历、技能、障碍、动机以及对特定研究技能发展的兴趣。
参与者包括47名学员和26名教员(回复率 = 30%)。在初级保健教员中,12人(71%)报告几乎没有研究经验,而专科教员为1人(11%),初级保健学员为14人(41%),专科培训学员为1人(8%)(p < 0.001)。前一年向机构审查委员会提交研究、向会议提交摘要或向期刊投稿的情况在不同群体中存在差异(分别为p = 0.001、p = 0.003和p < 0.001)。总体自我报告的研究技能在不同群体中也存在差异(p < 0.001)。初级保健教员报告的技能水平最低。不同群体之间存在差异的研究障碍包括其他工作角色优先级更高;对工作与生活平衡的渴望;以及缺乏管理支持、研究设备、行政支持和资金。
初级保健和专科的教员及学员在研究相关需求上存在差异,GME项目在设计支持学术活动的课程时应予以考虑。提高初级保健教员的研究技能是支持学员学术活动的优先事项。