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骨科手术教学课程提高了急诊医学住院医师处理桡骨远端骨折的信心。

Orthopaedic Surgery Didactic Session Improves Confidence in Distal Radius Fracture Management by Emergency Medicine Residents.

作者信息

Watkins Ian T, Duggan Jessica L, Lechtig Aron, Bauder Andrew, He Luke, Ilchuk Alexy, Doodlesack Amanda, Harper Carl, Rozental Tamara D

机构信息

Harvard Combined Orthopaedic Residency Program, Boston, Massachusetts.

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Division of Hand and Upper Extremity Surgery, Boston, Massachusetts.

出版信息

J Educ Teach Emerg Med. 2025 Apr 30;10(2):SG1-SG9. doi: 10.21980/J8K365. eCollection 2025 Apr.

Abstract

AUDIENCE

This didactic session on distal radius fracture diagnosis and management is designed for Emergency Medicine (EM) residents of all levels.

INTRODUCTION

With an incidence of 1,130 upper extremity injuries per 100,000 persons per year,1 distal radius fractures (DRFs) are the most common adult fracture, representing 17.5% of all fractures.2-4 Yet, many emergency medicine residents feel unprepared to manage DRFs independently upon graduation.5 The standard management of a fracture in the ED setting consists of identifying any urgent aspects of the fracture, controlling pain, performing a reduction if necessary, and applying a splint.6 Poor reduction or splinting techniques can lead to serious complications, including acute carpal tunnel or compartment syndrome, development of severe burns and rarely, amputation.6-8 Though it is common for emergency medicine (EM) resident trainees working in academic institutions to have regular access to orthopaedic surgery consultation, many will go on to practice in community settings or departments without access to full-time orthopaedic coverage. It is essential for EM residents to be familiar with DRF diagnosis and management, including closed reduction and splinting. We seek to create a toolbox for managing upper extremity fractures, with the overall purpose of improving orthopaedic care in the ED setting.

EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES

By the end of this didactic session, learners should be able to: 1) assess DRF displacement on pre-reduction radiography and formulate reduction strategies, 2) perform a closed reduction of a DRF, 3) apply a safe and appropriate plaster splint to patient with a DRF and assess the patient's neurovascular status, 4) assess DRF post-reduction radiography for relative fracture alignment, and 5) understand appropriate follow-up and necessary return precautions.

EDUCATIONAL METHODS

Learners attended a didactic session led by orthopaedic surgery residents which included a faculty-approved lecture on DRFs and hands-on skills workshop on reducing the fractures and effectively applying plaster splints.

RESEARCH METHODS

Prior to the educational session, participants completed a pre-workshop survey assessing current practices and baseline confidence regarding DRF management. Self-confidence levels for each skill were measured using a Likert scale from 0 (least confident) to 100 (most confident). Confidence levels were re-assessed immediately after the didactic session and three months later.

RESULTS

Nineteen emergency medicine (EM) residents (n=12, 63% female) across three class years (n=9, 47% PGY 1; n=6, 32% PGY 2; n=4, 21% PGY 3) completed the pre-workshop survey, and 15 residents participated in the didactic session and completed follow-up surveys. Fourteen (75%) EM residents reported reducing DRFs on their own (without an orthopaedic consult) less than half of the time. After the workshop, confidence levels increased significantly across all seven domains of DRF management, most notably in applying a plaster splint (+31.9 points, p<0.001), teaching DRF splinting techniques (+37.0 points, p<0.001), and managing DRF care in the ED independently (+34.6 points, p<0.001). These improvements persisted three months later.

DISCUSSION

The didactic session and skills workshop on DRF management were effective in improving EM residents' confidence measures in the short term. The session was well-received by the residents, who unanimously expressed interest in collaboration for future orthopaedic workshops. Further work should replicate this study with a larger sample and develop skills assessments to objectively evaluate learners' abilities in the short and long-term.

TOPICS

Distal radius fracture, reduction, splinting, collaboration, orthopaedic surgery, orthopaedics, resident education.

摘要

受众

本次关于桡骨远端骨折诊断与处理的教学课程是为各级急诊医学(EM)住院医师设计的。

引言

桡骨远端骨折(DRF)是最常见的成人骨折,每年每10万人中有1130例上肢损伤,占所有骨折的17.5%。然而,许多急诊医学住院医师毕业后仍觉得自己没有独立处理DRF的能力。在急诊环境中,骨折的标准处理包括识别骨折的任何紧急情况、控制疼痛、必要时进行复位以及应用夹板。复位或夹板固定技术不佳可能导致严重并发症,包括急性腕管综合征或骨筋膜室综合征、严重烧伤,极少数情况下会导致截肢。虽然在学术机构工作的急诊医学住院医师培训学员通常可以定期获得骨科会诊,但许多人将在没有全职骨科医生的社区环境或科室工作。急诊医学住院医师熟悉DRF的诊断和处理,包括闭合复位和夹板固定至关重要。我们旨在创建一个管理上肢骨折的工具箱,总体目标是改善急诊环境中的骨科护理。

教育目标

在本次教学课程结束时,学习者应能够:1)在复位前的X线片上评估DRF的移位情况并制定复位策略;2)对DRF进行闭合复位;3)为DRF患者应用安全合适的石膏夹板并评估患者的神经血管状况;4)评估复位后DRF的X线片以确定骨折的相对对线情况;5)了解适当的随访和必要的复诊注意事项。

教育方法

学习者参加了由骨科住院医师主持的教学课程,其中包括经教员批准的关于DRF的讲座以及关于骨折复位和有效应用石膏夹板的实践技能工作坊。

研究方法

在教育课程之前,参与者完成了一个工作坊前的调查,评估他们目前关于DRF处理的实践情况和基线信心。每项技能的自信程度使用从0(最不自信)到100(最自信)的李克特量表进行测量。在教学课程结束后立即以及三个月后重新评估自信程度。

结果

来自三个年级的19名急诊医学住院医师(n = 12,63%为女性)(n = 9,47%为PGY 1;n = 6,32%为PGY 2;n = 4,21%为PGY 3)完成了工作坊前的调查,15名住院医师参加了教学课程并完成了随访调查。14名(75%)急诊医学住院医师报告称,他们自己(无骨科会诊)处理DRF的时间不到一半。工作坊结束后,在DRF处理的所有七个领域,自信程度均显著提高,最明显的是在应用石膏夹板(提高31.9分,p < 0.001)、教授DRF夹板固定技术(提高37.0分,p < 0.001)以及在急诊独立处理DRF护理(提高34.6分,p < 0.001)方面。这些改善在三个月后仍然存在。

讨论

关于DRF处理的教学课程和技能工作坊在短期内有效提高了急诊医学住院医师的信心指标。该课程受到住院医师的好评,他们一致表示有兴趣在未来的骨科工作坊中进行合作。进一步的工作应该用更大的样本重复这项研究,并开发技能评估方法以客观评估学习者在短期和长期的能力。

主题

桡骨远端骨折、复位、夹板固定、合作、骨外科、骨科、住院医师教育

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ab1f/12054089/831698c0d0c6/jetem-10-2-sg1f1.jpg

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