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Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship

INTRODUCTION: One published strategy for improving educational experiences for medical students in the emergency department (ED) while maintaining patient care has been the implementation of dedicated teaching attending shifts. To leverage the advantages of the ED as an exceptional clinical educatio...

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Autores principales: Guth, Todd A., Overbeck, Michael C., Roswell, Kelley, Vu, Tien T., Williamson, Kayla M., Yi, Yeonjoo, Hilty, William, Druck, Jeff
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6948705/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31913820
http://dx.doi.org/10.5811/westjem.2019.11.44399
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author Guth, Todd A.
Overbeck, Michael C.
Roswell, Kelley
Vu, Tien T.
Williamson, Kayla M.
Yi, Yeonjoo
Hilty, William
Druck, Jeff
author_facet Guth, Todd A.
Overbeck, Michael C.
Roswell, Kelley
Vu, Tien T.
Williamson, Kayla M.
Yi, Yeonjoo
Hilty, William
Druck, Jeff
author_sort Guth, Todd A.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: One published strategy for improving educational experiences for medical students in the emergency department (ED) while maintaining patient care has been the implementation of dedicated teaching attending shifts. To leverage the advantages of the ED as an exceptional clinical educational environment and to address the challenges posed by the rapid pace and high volume of the ED, our institution developed a clerkship curriculum that incorporates a dedicated clinical educator role – the teaching attending – to deliver quality bedside teaching experiences for students in a required third-year clerkship. The purpose of this educational innovation was to determine whether a dedicated teaching attending experience on a third-year required emergency medicine (EM) clerkship would improve student-reported clinical teaching evaluations and student-reported satisfaction with the overall quality of the EM clerkship. METHODS: Using a five-point Likert-type scale (1 - poor to 5 - excellent), student-reported evaluation ratings and the numbers of graduating students matching into EM were trended for 10 years retrospectively from the inception of the clerkship for the graduating class of 2009 through and including the graduating class of 2019. We used multinomial logistic regression to evaluate whether the presence of a teaching attending during the EM clerkship improved student-reported evaluation ratings for the EM clerkship. We used sample proportion tests to assess the differences between top-box (4 or 5 rating) proportions between years when the teaching attending experience was present and when it was not. RESULTS: For clinical teaching quality, when the teaching attending is present the estimated odds of receiving a rating of 5 is 77.2 times greater (p <0.001) than when the teaching attending is not present and a rating of 4 is 27.5 times greater (p =0.0017). For overall clerkship quality, when the teaching attending is present, the estimated odds of receiving a rating of 5 is 13 times greater (p <0.001) and a rating of 4 is 5.2 times greater (p=0.0086) than when the teaching attending is not present. CONCLUSION: The use of a dedicated teaching attending shift is a successful educational innovation for improving student self-reported evaluation items in a third-year required EM clerkship.
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spelling pubmed-69487052020-01-13 Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship Guth, Todd A. Overbeck, Michael C. Roswell, Kelley Vu, Tien T. Williamson, Kayla M. Yi, Yeonjoo Hilty, William Druck, Jeff West J Emerg Med Educational Advances INTRODUCTION: One published strategy for improving educational experiences for medical students in the emergency department (ED) while maintaining patient care has been the implementation of dedicated teaching attending shifts. To leverage the advantages of the ED as an exceptional clinical educational environment and to address the challenges posed by the rapid pace and high volume of the ED, our institution developed a clerkship curriculum that incorporates a dedicated clinical educator role – the teaching attending – to deliver quality bedside teaching experiences for students in a required third-year clerkship. The purpose of this educational innovation was to determine whether a dedicated teaching attending experience on a third-year required emergency medicine (EM) clerkship would improve student-reported clinical teaching evaluations and student-reported satisfaction with the overall quality of the EM clerkship. METHODS: Using a five-point Likert-type scale (1 - poor to 5 - excellent), student-reported evaluation ratings and the numbers of graduating students matching into EM were trended for 10 years retrospectively from the inception of the clerkship for the graduating class of 2009 through and including the graduating class of 2019. We used multinomial logistic regression to evaluate whether the presence of a teaching attending during the EM clerkship improved student-reported evaluation ratings for the EM clerkship. We used sample proportion tests to assess the differences between top-box (4 or 5 rating) proportions between years when the teaching attending experience was present and when it was not. RESULTS: For clinical teaching quality, when the teaching attending is present the estimated odds of receiving a rating of 5 is 77.2 times greater (p <0.001) than when the teaching attending is not present and a rating of 4 is 27.5 times greater (p =0.0017). For overall clerkship quality, when the teaching attending is present, the estimated odds of receiving a rating of 5 is 13 times greater (p <0.001) and a rating of 4 is 5.2 times greater (p=0.0086) than when the teaching attending is not present. CONCLUSION: The use of a dedicated teaching attending shift is a successful educational innovation for improving student self-reported evaluation items in a third-year required EM clerkship. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2020-01 2019-12-18 /pmc/articles/PMC6948705/ /pubmed/31913820 http://dx.doi.org/10.5811/westjem.2019.11.44399 Text en Copyright: © 2020 Guth et al. http://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/
spellingShingle Educational Advances
Guth, Todd A.
Overbeck, Michael C.
Roswell, Kelley
Vu, Tien T.
Williamson, Kayla M.
Yi, Yeonjoo
Hilty, William
Druck, Jeff
Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship
title Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship
title_full Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship
title_fullStr Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship
title_full_unstemmed Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship
title_short Impact of a Dedicated Teaching Attending Experience on a Required Emergency Medicine Clerkship
title_sort impact of a dedicated teaching attending experience on a required emergency medicine clerkship
topic Educational Advances
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6948705/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31913820
http://dx.doi.org/10.5811/westjem.2019.11.44399
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