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Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy

AUDIENCE: This pharmacotherapy curriculum is designed for emergency medicine residents of all postgraduate years and could also be given to rotating medical students during clerkships. LENGTH OF CURRICULUM: Curriculum is to run monthly for an 18-month general curriculum cycle INTRODUCTION: Pharmacot...

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Autores principales: Eichenberger, David, Pollock, Gary, Huber, Luke, Brown, Aaron, Zimmerman, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10332758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37465540
http://dx.doi.org/10.21980/J8PW61
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author Eichenberger, David
Pollock, Gary
Huber, Luke
Brown, Aaron
Zimmerman, David
author_facet Eichenberger, David
Pollock, Gary
Huber, Luke
Brown, Aaron
Zimmerman, David
author_sort Eichenberger, David
collection PubMed
description AUDIENCE: This pharmacotherapy curriculum is designed for emergency medicine residents of all postgraduate years and could also be given to rotating medical students during clerkships. LENGTH OF CURRICULUM: Curriculum is to run monthly for an 18-month general curriculum cycle INTRODUCTION: Pharmacotherapy is a critical part of day-to-day practice of Emergency Medicine (EM). The purpose of this innovation is to give this subject specific dedicated instruction time. We introduced a dedicated pharmacotherapy curriculum as part of our conference time through a series of case-based question sets that mirrored our educational blocks. EDUCATIONAL GOALS: Our goals were to teach residents clinical applications of EM pharmacotherapy including drug selection and consideration of alternatives, interactions, and adverse effects, as well as to prepare them for pharmacotherapy questions on board examinations. EDUCATIONAL METHODS: The educational strategies used in this curriculum include: case-based vignettes, multiple choice assessments, and guided review explanation and discussion. Questions and explanations are written by resident physicians using a variety of textbooks and online resources and are then reviewed, edited, and expanded upon by attending physicians and an EM pharmacist. RESEARCH METHODS: This curriculum was implemented in the University of Pittsburgh Emergency Medicine residency program. Curriculum is ongoing and initial data covers a 4-month pilot period. Survey questionnaires were given before and after, using the 7-point Likert scale (1 strongly agree to 7 strongly disagree) for self-assessed knowledge and satisfaction with the curriculum. Primary measure was resident agreement with the statement, “I am confident in overall knowledge of EM pharmacotherapy.” We also surveyed readiness for independent practice, knowledge appropriate for training level, board exam preparedness, and satisfaction with curriculum. RESULTS: On the whole residents did feel their pharmacology knowledge improved. Our primary marker was response to a survey question, “I am confident in my overall knowledge of EM pharmacotherapy.” In our sample of 30 residents, this question received a pretest score of 3.7 on a 7-point Likert scale (1 strongly agree, 7 strongly disagree). On post intervention surveys this score had improved to 2.6 (p = .00008). In general, residents appreciated this change in curriculum structure. Resident assessment of their improvement during the curriculum was 2.1, aligning with “agree.” Satisfaction also improved from a 3.8 on initial survey to a 3.1, with statistical significance (p =.023). DISCUSSION: We had success in our primary outcome of self-assessed resident learning as above. Satisfaction also improved. Residents assessed self-improvement in knowledge relative to year of training, clinical practice ability, and independent practice ability by statistically significant amounts. In addition, the assessments provided the residency clinical competency committee with objective knowledge of pharmacotherapy-based topics. We feel this easy to implement and effective curriculum would be generalizable across programs looking to add options for teaching EM pharmacotherapy, or to other programs looking to add a formal instruction and evaluation component to traditionally informal curriculum. TOPICS: Emergency Medicine, education, pharmacotherapy, case based, questions, milestones.
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spelling pubmed-103327582023-07-18 Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy Eichenberger, David Pollock, Gary Huber, Luke Brown, Aaron Zimmerman, David J Educ Teach Emerg Med Curriculum AUDIENCE: This pharmacotherapy curriculum is designed for emergency medicine residents of all postgraduate years and could also be given to rotating medical students during clerkships. LENGTH OF CURRICULUM: Curriculum is to run monthly for an 18-month general curriculum cycle INTRODUCTION: Pharmacotherapy is a critical part of day-to-day practice of Emergency Medicine (EM). The purpose of this innovation is to give this subject specific dedicated instruction time. We introduced a dedicated pharmacotherapy curriculum as part of our conference time through a series of case-based question sets that mirrored our educational blocks. EDUCATIONAL GOALS: Our goals were to teach residents clinical applications of EM pharmacotherapy including drug selection and consideration of alternatives, interactions, and adverse effects, as well as to prepare them for pharmacotherapy questions on board examinations. EDUCATIONAL METHODS: The educational strategies used in this curriculum include: case-based vignettes, multiple choice assessments, and guided review explanation and discussion. Questions and explanations are written by resident physicians using a variety of textbooks and online resources and are then reviewed, edited, and expanded upon by attending physicians and an EM pharmacist. RESEARCH METHODS: This curriculum was implemented in the University of Pittsburgh Emergency Medicine residency program. Curriculum is ongoing and initial data covers a 4-month pilot period. Survey questionnaires were given before and after, using the 7-point Likert scale (1 strongly agree to 7 strongly disagree) for self-assessed knowledge and satisfaction with the curriculum. Primary measure was resident agreement with the statement, “I am confident in overall knowledge of EM pharmacotherapy.” We also surveyed readiness for independent practice, knowledge appropriate for training level, board exam preparedness, and satisfaction with curriculum. RESULTS: On the whole residents did feel their pharmacology knowledge improved. Our primary marker was response to a survey question, “I am confident in my overall knowledge of EM pharmacotherapy.” In our sample of 30 residents, this question received a pretest score of 3.7 on a 7-point Likert scale (1 strongly agree, 7 strongly disagree). On post intervention surveys this score had improved to 2.6 (p = .00008). In general, residents appreciated this change in curriculum structure. Resident assessment of their improvement during the curriculum was 2.1, aligning with “agree.” Satisfaction also improved from a 3.8 on initial survey to a 3.1, with statistical significance (p =.023). DISCUSSION: We had success in our primary outcome of self-assessed resident learning as above. Satisfaction also improved. Residents assessed self-improvement in knowledge relative to year of training, clinical practice ability, and independent practice ability by statistically significant amounts. In addition, the assessments provided the residency clinical competency committee with objective knowledge of pharmacotherapy-based topics. We feel this easy to implement and effective curriculum would be generalizable across programs looking to add options for teaching EM pharmacotherapy, or to other programs looking to add a formal instruction and evaluation component to traditionally informal curriculum. TOPICS: Emergency Medicine, education, pharmacotherapy, case based, questions, milestones. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2021-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10332758/ /pubmed/37465540 http://dx.doi.org/10.21980/J8PW61 Text en © 2021 Eichenberger, et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) License. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Curriculum
Eichenberger, David
Pollock, Gary
Huber, Luke
Brown, Aaron
Zimmerman, David
Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy
title Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy
title_full Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy
title_fullStr Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy
title_short Case-Based Questions for Teaching Emergency Medicine Pharmacotherapy
title_sort case-based questions for teaching emergency medicine pharmacotherapy
topic Curriculum
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10332758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37465540
http://dx.doi.org/10.21980/J8PW61
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