Moon Jean, Lounsbery Jody, Hall Amie, Ballard Stephanie L, Owens Nicholas, Slattengren Andrew
University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy.
Family Health Clinic, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.
PRiMER. 2017 Aug 8;1:9. doi: 10.22454/PRiMER.2017.393370. eCollection 2017 Sep.
Family medicine residency programs (FMRPs) endeavor to meet evidence-based medicine (EBM) subcompetencies through the milestones project. Comprehensive descriptions of clinical pharmacists' contributions in teaching EBM within the context of residency are limited.
Over a study period of 2 months, clinical pharmacists across five FMRPs in four states were invited to track their interactions with physician residents. EBM resources, skills, and targeted milestone data were collected. Pharmacists also quantified their nonpatient care contributions to EBM.
Of the 16 clinical pharmacists invited, 16 (100%) participated in the October and 12 (75.0%) in the March collection period. A total of 598.9 half days over 2 months (42 working days) of available teaching time were reported. The tracking tool captured 1,253 EBM teaching encounters with a total average of 2.1 encounters per half day. Of those encounters, point-of-care references were most commonly used (63.7%) and "apply" was the most common EBM skill taught (83.8%). The most commonly tracked milestone was Medical Knowledge 2 (75.3%) at Level 2. Nine out of 10 faculty pharmacists included in this study reported performing the following roles: preceptor (100%), lecturer (89.9%), provider (77.8%), expert/consultant (77.8%), health care team (66.7%), and other (11.1%). Faculty pharmacists also reported directly evaluating milestones for physician residents through: committee work (44.4%), resident evaluations (77.8%), and rotation evaluations (77.8%).
As FMRPs strive to meet ACGME EBM-related competencies, clinical pharmacists across multiple sites demonstrated contributions to teaching EBM in medical resident education. Using a nonphysician faculty for this purpose may provide an example for other FMRPs.
家庭医学住院医师培训项目(FMRPs)致力于通过里程碑项目来实现循证医学(EBM)的亚能力要求。关于临床药师在住院医师培训背景下对循证医学教学贡献的全面描述较为有限。
在为期2个月的研究期间,邀请了四个州的五个家庭医学住院医师培训项目中的临床药师追踪他们与医师住院医师的互动情况。收集了循证医学资源、技能以及目标里程碑数据。药师们还对他们在非患者护理方面对循证医学的贡献进行了量化。
在受邀的16名临床药师中,16名(100%)参与了10月份的收集工作,12名(75.0%)参与了3月份的收集工作。在2个月(42个工作日)的可用教学时间里,总共报告了598.9个半天。追踪工具记录了1253次循证医学教学接触,平均每半天2.1次接触。在这些接触中,即时参考资料使用最为频繁(63.7%),“应用”是最常教授的循证医学技能(83.8%)。最常追踪的里程碑是2级的医学知识2(75.3%)。本研究纳入的10名药师教员中有9名报告履行了以下角色:带教老师(100%)、讲师(89.9%)、提供者(77.8%)、专家/顾问(77.8%)、医疗团队成员(66.7%)以及其他(11.1%)。药师教员还报告通过以下方式直接评估医师住院医师的里程碑:委员会工作(44.4%)、住院医师评估(77.8%)以及轮转评估(77.8%)。
随着家庭医学住院医师培训项目努力达到美国研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)与循证医学相关的能力要求,多个地点的临床药师在医学住院医师教育的循证医学教学方面做出了贡献。为此使用非医师教员可能为其他家庭医学住院医师培训项目提供一个范例。