Magnusson A R, Hedges J R, Ashley P, Harper R J
Department of Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 1998 Jul;5(7):718-25. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.1998.tb02491.x.
To compare amounts of in-hospital time use by PGY1 residents during rotations in emergency medicine (EM), internal medicine (IM), and surgery. This article reports the general study methodology and focuses on the educational aspects of residency time use.
A cross-sectional, observational study of the activities of EM PGY1 residents was performed while the residents were on duty during the 3 specialty rotations. The activities were recorded by an observer using a log with predetermined categories for clinical/service, educational, and personal areas. A time-blocked, convenience sample of resident shifts was observed for each service rotation. The sample was proportional to the total number of hours for which a PGY1 resident was expected to be in the hospital during a rotation on that service. No attempt was made to sample the same resident at all time periods or on all rotations.
Twelve PGY1 residents were observed for a total of 166 hours on surgery, 156 hours on IM, and 120 hours on EM. These hourly amounts were representative of a typical 2-week span of service on each rotation for the residents. On average, the residents spent 57% of their time on clinical or service-oriented activities, 24% on educational activities, and 19% on personal activities. The proportions of time devoted to the 3 major areas were similar for the 3 rotations. In all 3 rotations, the largest proportion of time was spent on patient-focused education (81% to 92% of total educational time). Only 2% to 11% of educational time was devoted to self-education. Within the patient-focused education category, proportionately less resident time with faculty occurred on the surgery rotation than on the EM and IM rotations (18% vs 30% and 27%, respectively).
The general breakdowns of clinical/service, educational, and personal time use by PGY1 residents are proportionately similar for the 3 service rotations. Patient-focused education is the primary mode of education for all services. In-hospital, self-education time is limited. Clinical teaching is largely by nonfaculty. The educational implications of these findings are discussed.
比较一年级住院医师在急诊医学(EM)、内科(IM)和外科轮转期间的住院时间使用情况。本文报告了总体研究方法,并重点关注住院医师时间使用的教育方面。
对急诊医学一年级住院医师在3个专科轮转值班期间的活动进行横断面观察性研究。观察者使用带有临床/服务、教育和个人领域预定类别的日志记录活动。对每个服务轮转的住院医师班次进行了时间分组的便利抽样观察。该样本与一年级住院医师在该服务轮转期间预计在医院的总小时数成比例。未尝试在所有时间段或所有轮转中对同一名住院医师进行抽样。
观察了12名一年级住院医师,外科轮转共166小时,内科轮转156小时,急诊医学轮转120小时。这些小时数代表了住院医师每次轮转典型的2周服务期。平均而言,住院医师将57%的时间用于临床或服务导向活动,24%用于教育活动,19%用于个人活动。3个轮转中用于这3个主要领域的时间比例相似。在所有3个轮转中,用于以患者为中心的教育时间占比最大(占总教育时间的81%至92%)。仅2%至11%的教育时间用于自我教育。在以患者为中心的教育类别中,与教员在一起的住院医师时间在外科轮转中所占比例低于急诊医学和内科轮转(分别为18%,而急诊医学和内科轮转分别为30%和27%)。
一年级住院医师在3个服务轮转中临床/服务、教育和个人时间使用的总体分类比例相似。以患者为中心的教育是所有服务的主要教育模式。住院期间自我教育时间有限。临床教学主要由非教员进行。讨论了这些发现的教育意义。