Darling Alanna, Ullman Edward, Novak Victor, Doyle Melissa, Dubosh Nicole M
Department of Emergency Medicine, UMass Chan Medical School - Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, MA, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Adv Med Educ Pract. 2022 Oct 13;13:1279-1285. doi: 10.2147/AMEP.S365450. eCollection 2022.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a widespread public health issue that is relevant to all areas of medicine. Patients who suffer from IPV often contact the health care system via the emergency department, making this a particularly important but too often overlooked issue in this setting. Education on IPV varies in medical schools and emergency medicine (EM) educational programs, and evidence suggests that a barrier to assessing for IPV is a lack of adequate training of clinicians. In this study, we sought to design, implement and evaluate the efficacy of a curriculum on IPV geared towards medical students on an EM clerkship.
We assembled a multi-disciplinary team of EM education faculty, a resident content expert on IPV, and social workers to design a two-part curriculum that was administered to medical students on an EM clerkship. The curriculum involved a 20-minute narrated slide presentation viewed asynchronously, followed by a 1-hour case-based discussion session. The curriculum was evaluated using a 13-item self-assessment survey on knowledge, comfort level and skill in managing victims of IPV, administered electronically before and after the curriculum. Survey results were compared pre- and post-curriculum using Wilcoxon signed-rank test.
Thirty-four students completed the curriculum and 26 completed both the pre and post self-assessment surveys. A statistically significant improvement in knowledge, comfort level and skills was observed in 11 of the 13 survey elements.
Based on the self-assessment survey results, this curriculum was well received and successfully increased participants' comfort, knowledge and skill level regarding assessment of patients for IPV. This is a focused and feasible curriculum that can be easily incorporated into an EM clerkship to provide effective education on a relevant but often overlooked topic.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)是一个广泛存在的公共卫生问题,与医学的各个领域都相关。遭受IPV的患者常常通过急诊科与医疗系统接触,这使得这一问题在该环境中尤为重要,但却常常被忽视。医学院校和急诊医学(EM)教育项目中关于IPV的教育各不相同,有证据表明,评估IPV的一个障碍是临床医生缺乏足够的培训。在本研究中,我们旨在设计、实施并评估一门针对参加EM实习的医学生的IPV课程的效果。
我们组建了一个多学科团队,成员包括EM教育教员、一名IPV方面的住院医师内容专家以及社会工作者,来设计一个分为两部分的课程,该课程面向参加EM实习的医学生。该课程包括一个20分钟的配有旁白的幻灯片演示,学生可异步观看,随后是一个1小时的基于案例的讨论环节。通过一项关于管理IPV受害者的知识、舒适度和技能的13项自我评估调查对该课程进行评估,在课程前后以电子方式进行。使用Wilcoxon符号秩检验对课程前后的调查结果进行比较。
34名学生完成了该课程,26名学生完成了课前和课后的自我评估调查。在13项调查内容中的11项中,观察到知识、舒适度和技能有统计学上的显著提高。
根据自我评估调查结果,该课程受到好评,并成功提高了参与者在评估IPV患者方面的舒适度、知识和技能水平。这是一门重点突出且可行的课程,可轻松纳入EM实习中,以就一个相关但常被忽视的主题提供有效的教育。