LaPolla Fred Willie Zametkin, Barber Grossi Marco, Chen Sharon, Guo Tai Wei, Havranek Kathryn, Jebb Olivia, Nguyen Minh Thu, Panganamamula Sneha, Smith Noah, Sundaresh Shree, Yu Jonathan, Mayer Gabrielle
NYU Health Sciences Library, NYU Langone Health Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, United States.
Department of General Internal Medicine and Clinical Innovations, NYU Langone Health Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, United States.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2024 Dec 1;31(12):3008-3012. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocae162.
The goal of this case report is to detail experiences and challenges experienced in the training of Primary Care residents in secondary analysis using All of Us Researcher Workbench. At our large, urban safety net hospital, Primary Care/Internal Medicine residents in their third year undergo a research intensive block, the Research Practicum, where they work as a team to conduct secondary data analysis on a dataset with faculty facilitation. In 2023, this research block focused on use of the All of Us Researcher Workbench for secondary data analysis.
Two groups of 5 residents underwent training to access the All of Us Researcher Workbench, and each group explored available data with a faculty facilitator and generated original research questions. Two blocks of residents successfully completed their research blocks and created original presentations on "social isolation and A1C" levels and "medical discrimination and diabetes management."
Departmental faculty were satisfied with the depth of learning and data exploration. In focus groups, some residents noted that for those without interest in performing research, the activity felt extraneous to their career goals, while others were glad for the opportunity to publish. In both blocks, residents highlighted dissatisfaction with the degree to which the All of Us Researcher Workbench was representative of patients they encounter in a large safety net hospital.
Using the All of Us Researcher Workbench provided residents with an opportunity to explore novel questions in a massive data source. Many residents however noted that because the population described in the All of Us Researcher Workbench appeared to be more highly educated and less racially diverse than patients they encounter in their practice, research may be hard to generalize in a community health context. Additionally, given that the data required knowledge of 1 of 2 code-based data analysis languages (R or Python) and work within an idiosyncratic coding environment, residents were heavily reliant on a faculty facilitator to assist with analysis.
Using the All of Us Researcher Workbench for research training allowed residents to explore novel questions and gain first-hand exposure to opportunities and challenges in secondary data analysis.
本病例报告的目的是详细介绍在使用“我们所有人”研究工作台进行二次分析培训初级保健住院医师时所经历的经验和挑战。在我们这家大型城市安全网医院,三年级的初级保健/内科住院医师要经历一个研究密集模块,即研究实习,在教员的指导下,他们作为一个团队对一个数据集进行二次数据分析。2023年,这个研究模块聚焦于使用“我们所有人”研究工作台进行二次数据分析。
两组各5名住院医师接受了访问“我们所有人”研究工作台的培训,每组在一名教员的指导下探索可用数据,并提出原创研究问题。两组住院医师成功完成了他们的研究模块,并就“社会隔离与糖化血红蛋白水平”以及“医疗歧视与糖尿病管理”制作了原创报告。
部门教员对学习深度和数据探索感到满意。在焦点小组中,一些住院医师指出,对于那些对开展研究没有兴趣的人来说,这项活动感觉与他们的职业目标无关,而其他人则很高兴有发表成果的机会。在两个模块中,住院医师都强调了对“我们所有人”研究工作台所代表的患者与他们在大型安全网医院遇到的患者的相符程度的不满。
使用“我们所有人”研究工作台为住院医师提供了一个在海量数据源中探索新问题的机会。然而,许多住院医师指出,由于“我们所有人”研究工作台中描述的人群似乎比他们在临床实践中遇到的患者受教育程度更高,种族多样性更低,因此研究结果可能很难在社区健康背景下推广。此外,鉴于数据需要掌握两种基于代码的数据分析语言(R或Python)中的一种,并在一个特殊的编码环境中工作,住院医师在很大程度上依赖教员协助进行分析。
使用“我们所有人”研究工作台进行研究培训使住院医师能够探索新问题,并亲身体验二次数据分析中的机遇和挑战。