Abstract

BackgroundRecent surveys suggest few emergency medicine (EM) training programs have formal evidence-based medicine (EBM) or journal club curricula. Our primary objective was to describe the methods of EBM training in Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) EM residencies. Secondary objectives were to explore attitudes regarding current educational practices including e-learning, investigate barriers to journal club and EBM education, and assess the desire for national collaboration.MethodsA 16-question survey containing binary, open-ended, and 5-pt Likert scale questions was distributed to the 14 RCPSC-EM program directors. Proportions of respondents (%), median, and IQR are reported.ResultsThe response rate was 93% (13/14). Most programs (85%) had established EBM curricula. Curricula content was delivered most frequently via journal club, with 62% of programs having 10 or more sessions annually. Less than half of journal clubs (46%) were led consistently by EBM experts. Four programs did not use a critical appraisal tool in their sessions (31%). Additional teaching formats included didactic and small group sessions, self-directed e-learning, EBM workshops, and library tutorials. 54% of programs operated educational websites with EBM resources. Program directors attributed highest importance to two core goals in EBM training curricula: critical appraisal of medical literature, and application of literature to patient care (85% rating 5 - “most importance”, respectively). Podcasts, blogs, and online journal clubs were valued for EBM teaching roles including creating exposure to literature (4, IQR 1.5) and linking literature to clinical practice experience (4, IQR 1.5) (1-no merit, 5-strong merit). Five of thirteen respondents rated lack of expert leadership and trained faculty educators as potential limitations to EBM education. The majority of respondents supported the creation of a national unified EBM educational resource (4, IQR 1) (1-no support, 5- strongly support).ConclusionsRCPSC-EM programs have established EBM teaching curricula and deliver content most frequently via journal club. A lack of EBM expert educators may limit content delivery at certain sites. Program directors supported the nationalization of EBM educational resources. A growing usage of electronic resources may represent an avenue to link national EBM educational expertise, facilitating future collaborative educational efforts.

Highlights

  • Recent surveys suggest few emergency medicine (EM) training programs have formal evidence-based medicine (EBM) or journal club curricula

  • Such work has established a baseline in teaching methods and outlined a needs assessment for training programs in the United States (US), this first step has not been performed in Canada

  • We explored the following domains: (i) EBM curricula format and core values, (ii) journal club characteristics and limitations, (iii) use and perceived merit of electronic/web based EBM resources, and (iv) basic demographics

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Summary

Introduction

Recent surveys suggest few emergency medicine (EM) training programs have formal evidence-based medicine (EBM) or journal club curricula. Our primary objective was to describe the methods of EBM training in Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) EM residencies. The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) provides a five-year training program in Emergency Medicine (EM) with special emphasis on developing academic emergency physicians [1]. A recent survey of the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors in the United States (US) indicates a minority of programs had predefined journal club or EBM curricula (25%) or used structured critical appraisal instruments in their journal clubs (29%) [6]. Kuhn and colleagues reported only 22% of EM program directors in the US conducted more than five didactic EBM sessions per year [7]. Such work has established a baseline in teaching methods and outlined a needs assessment for training programs in the US, this first step has not been performed in Canada

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