Shah Shikhar H, Clark Maureen D, Hu Kimberly, Shoener Jalene A, Fogel Joshua, Kling William C, Ronayne James
College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Library of the Health Sciences, University Library, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
JMIR Med Educ. 2017 Oct 17;3(2):e18. doi: 10.2196/mededu.7730.
There is a dearth of advocacy training in graduate medical education in the United States. To address this void, the Legislative Education and Advocacy Development (LEAD) course was developed as an interprofessional experience, partnering a cohort of pediatrics residents, fourth-year medical students, and public health students to be trained in evidence-informed health policy making.
The objective of our study was to evaluate the usefulness and acceptability of a service-based legislative advocacy course.
We conducted a pilot study using a single-arm pre-post study design with 10 participants in the LEAD course. The course's didactic portion taught learners how to define policy problems, research the background of the situation, brainstorm solutions, determine evaluation criteria, develop communication strategies, and formulate policy recommendations for state legislators. Learners worked in teams to create and present policy briefs addressing issues submitted by participating Illinois State legislators. We compared knowledge and attitudes of learners from pre- and postcourse surveys. We obtained qualitative feedback from legislators and pediatric residency directors.
Self-reported understanding of the health care system increased (mean score from 4 to 3.3, P=.01), with answers scored from 1=highly agree to 5=completely disagree. Mean knowledge-based scores improved (6.8/15 to 12.0/15 correct). Pediatric residency program directors and state legislators provided positive feedback about the LEAD course.
Promising results were demonstrated for the LEAD approach to incorporate advocacy training into graduate medical education.
在美国,研究生医学教育中缺乏倡导培训。为填补这一空白,立法教育与倡导发展(LEAD)课程作为一种跨专业体验课程而开发,让一群儿科住院医师、四年级医学生和公共卫生专业学生参与,接受循证健康政策制定方面的培训。
我们研究的目的是评估基于服务的立法倡导课程的实用性和可接受性。
我们采用单组前后测研究设计进行了一项试点研究,有10名参与者参加LEAD课程。该课程的理论部分教导学习者如何界定政策问题、研究情况背景、集思广益解决方案、确定评估标准、制定沟通策略以及为州立法者制定政策建议。学习者分组合作,撰写并展示政策简报,以解决伊利诺伊州参与的立法者提交的问题。我们比较了课程前后学习者的知识和态度。我们从立法者和儿科住院医师项目主任那里获得了定性反馈。
自我报告的对医疗保健系统的理解有所提高(平均得分从4降至3.3,P = 0.01),回答得分范围为1 = 非常同意至5 = 完全不同意。基于知识的平均得分有所提高(从6.8/15正确提高到12.0/15正确)。儿科住院医师项目主任和州立法者对LEAD课程给予了积极反馈。
将倡导培训纳入研究生医学教育的LEAD方法取得了有前景的结果。