J.T. Luty is assistant professor, Department of Medicine, and medical director of performance improvement for graduate medical education, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6040-3448 .
H. Oldham was a chief resident in quality and safety, Veterans Affairs Portland Healthcare System, Portland, Oregon, at the time of writing. He is currently clinical hospitalist, Providence Portland Medical Center, Portland, Oregon.
Acad Med. 2022 Apr 1;97(4):529-535. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004424.
Requirements for experiential education in quality improvement and patient safety (QI/PS) in graduate medical education (GME) have recently expanded. Major challenges to meeting these requirements include a lack of faculty with the needed expertise, paucity of standardized curricular models allowing for skill demonstration, and inconsistent access to data for iterative improvement.
In October 2017, the authors began development of a centralized QI/PS flipped-classroom simulation-based medical education (SBME) curriculum for GME trainees across multiple disciplines at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU). The curriculum development team included OHSU and Veterans Affairs faculty with experience in QI/PS and SBME, as well as house officers. The curriculum consisted of a preassessment and prework readings and videos (sent 3 weeks before the simulation day) and an 8-hour simulation day, with introductory activities, 4 linked simulation sessions, and concluding activities. The 4 linked sessions followed the same medication error from disclosure and reporting to root cause analysis, iterative implementation of an action plan, and consolidation of lessons learned into routine operations with Lean huddles.
In academic year 2018-2019, 71 residents and fellows of various postgraduate years from 23 training programs enrolled in 2 pilot sessions. Learners reacted favorably to the simulation curriculum. Learner attitudes, confidence, knowledge, and skills significantly increased across all QI/PS domains studied.
This approach focuses a small cadre of educators toward the creation of a centralized resource that, owing to its experiential SBME foundation, can accommodate many learners with data-driven practice-based learning and improvement cycles in a shorter time frame than traditional QI initiatives. Next steps include the addition of a control group, assessment of the sustainability of learner outcomes, translation of learning to behavior change and improvements in patient and health system outcomes, and adapting the materials to include learners from different professions and levels.
在研究生医学教育(GME)中,质量改进和患者安全(QI/PS)的体验式教育的要求最近有所扩大。满足这些要求的主要挑战包括缺乏具有所需专业知识的教师、缺乏允许技能展示的标准化课程模式,以及迭代改进的不一致数据访问。
2017 年 10 月,作者开始为俄勒冈健康与科学大学(OHSU)的多个学科的 GME 学员开发集中的 QI/PS 翻转课堂模拟基于医学教育(SBME)课程。课程开发团队包括在 QI/PS 和 SBME 方面具有经验的 OHSU 和退伍军人事务部的教师,以及住院医师。课程包括预评估和预读以及视频(在模拟日前 3 周发送)和 8 小时的模拟日,包括介绍性活动、4 个链接的模拟会议和总结活动。4 个链接的会议遵循相同的从披露和报告到根本原因分析、迭代实施行动计划以及将经验教训纳入常规操作的药物错误,与精益会议相结合。
在 2018-2019 学年,来自 23 个培训项目的 71 名住院医师和研究员参加了 2 个试点课程。学习者对模拟课程反应良好。在所有研究的 QI/PS 领域,学习者的态度、信心、知识和技能都显著提高。
这种方法侧重于一小部分教育工作者,致力于创建一个集中的资源,由于其体验式 SBME 基础,可以在比传统 QI 计划更短的时间内容纳许多学习者,进行数据驱动的实践基础学习和改进周期。下一步包括增加对照组,评估学习者结果的可持续性,将学习转化为行为改变以及改善患者和卫生系统的结果,以及改编材料以包括来自不同专业和级别的学习者。