Abstract

CONTEXTIt is now increasingly recognized that physicians should be engaged in quality improvement/patient safety (QIPS) activities to make their patient care systems perform more reliably and safely. In order to ensure that our nation’s physicians embed this aspect of practice into their work, there also is a growing expectation for effective integration of QIPS training into graduate medical education. This exploratory pilot study was conducted to identify how residents’ personal and residency program characteristics might be related to their perceived confidence to develop and conduct prospective QIPS projects.METHODSA total non-probability convenience sample of 43 DO resident physicians from five residency programs (Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, and Psychiatry) at Authority Health were surveyed from 09/28/2015 to 01/06/2016 using online Survey Monkey software. A 38-item survey asked residents about their personal and residency program characteristics, as well as their current overall perceived confidence to develop and conduct QIPS projects.RESULTSTwo model terms that proved non-significant during analyses were residents’ age category and year in residency training. In the final stepwise multinomial regression model, however, three covariates including: a) sex (p=0.045), b) being in a primary care residency program (p=0.038) and c) having had prior QIPS project experience (p=0.049) were each found to be statistically significant predictors of respondents’ perceived comfort level categories. Male residents and those who were in a primary care residency program (i.e., Family Medicine, Internal Medicine or Pediatrics), and/or reported having had prior QIPS project experience, reported significantly higher confidence levels.CONCLUSIONSSomewhat similar to earlier studies, these results suggest the need to incorporate QIPS education for resident trainees across the nation. Ideally, the findings from larger resident studies will enable GME leaders to develop and deliver evidence-based QIPS curricula that are better oriented to resident physicians’ personal characteristics and preferences.

Highlights

  • National concerns regarding an improved awareness of patient safety and quality of care within the US health care system have driven expectations for a minimal competence level in quality improvement/patient safety (QIPS) from contemporary physicians

  • In order to ensure that our future physicians embed this aspect of practice into their work, there is a growing mandate for the effective integration of QIPS training into graduate medical education (GME).[3]

  • The overall rationale for such integration of QIPS content into GME curricula is a belief that when residents develop and apply project design/conduction skills, they will continue to participate in such activities once they enter post-residency practice.[3,5]

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Summary

METHODS

A total non-probability convenience sample of 43 DO resident physicians from five residency programs (Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, and Psychiatry) at Authority Health were surveyed from 09/28/2015 to 01/06/ 2016 using online Survey Monkey software. A 38-item survey asked residents about their personal and residency program characteristics, as well as their current overall perceived confidence to develop and conduct QIPS projects

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