Abstract

The 2016 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Clinical Learning Environment Review report identified knowledge gaps for quality in the clinical environment. It suggested quality improvement (QI) training is necessary to develop skills to improve health care quality. However, at the authors' institution, there is limited department-level QI mentorship and engagement, thus limiting QI experiences for residents and fellows. The authors developed pediatric graduate medical education program director (PD) proficiency in QI through a fellowship-focused QI project. PDs underwent an 18-month QI curriculum consisting of focused online QI education, a half-day workshop, additional QI didactic sessions, project presentations, and individual QI coaching. QI knowledge in 9 domains and participants' confidence were assessed. Participants' self-perceived confidence and skills increased by at least 20% in most domains. Overall, PDs felt prepared to help with their fellows' future QI projects. Fellowship-focused QI projects and individual coaching were key to course engagement.

Full Text
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