Abstract

Introduction:The transition to residency is a challenging time in the medical trainee’s career. In addition to learning and implementing knowledge specific to emergency medicine, logistics and system nuances can initially impede a learner’s ability to begin the process of mastering their profession. In an attempt to ameliorate this transition to residency an orientation was created to introduce concepts of local ultrasound documentation, resuscitation protocols, EMR navigation, and procedural kits.Method:Interns were given a pre-workshop survey on comfort level (1-5 Likert) of ultrasound documentation, resuscitation protocols, EMR navigation, and procedural kits. They rotated through four workshop stations in small groups. The first was an ultrasound workshop showcasing our commonly used ultrasound and how we capture images and videos into our medical system for review. The next was institution specific protocols for medical and trauma resuscitation using simulation. Third was a workshop on how to navigate our electronic medical record with simple overviews of documentation and order entry. Lastly, they went through arterial and central line kits to familiarize themselves with the contents. A post-workshop survey was given.Results:Comfort with ultrasound documentation pre-workshop mean was 4.0 with a post-workshop mean of 4.45 (p=0.068). Comfort with resuscitation pre-workshop mean of 2.91 increased to 3.91 (p=0.008). Electronic medical record documentation comfort rose from a mean of 3.5 to 4.27 (p=0.007). Comfort navigating procedural kits increased to a mean of 4.09 from 3 (p=0.002).Conclusion:There was a statistically significant increase in comfort level with ultrasound documentation, resuscitation protocols, EMR navigation, and procedural kits after completion of the workshops. Only ultrasound documentation had a p value less than 0.05. It can be reasonably deduced that focusing on institutionally specific aspects of workflow can help interns expedite their education by familiarizing them with these nuances prior to their first shift.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call