Abstract

9018 Background: Comprehensive hematology education during fellowship is paramount for providing high-quality care, especially in busy practices. Variability in fellow educational experiences is expected. However, fellowship programs must ensure a well-rounded, equitable educational experience for all fellows to prepare them for practice and board exams in the increasingly dynamic field of hematology. Methods: We administered an e-mail survey to hematology/oncology fellows (n=30) at Mayo (Rochester) to explore inpatient hematology education experiences and the Fellow Hematology Curriculum (FHC) during 2021-2022. Based on results, we designed a fellow-led, consultant-supervised quality improvement (QI) initiative to improve FHC. Responses were in a five-point Likert scale and open-ended format. Results: Twenty fellows completed the survey (66% response rate). Respondents were well distributed (35% PGY4, 25% PGY5, 40% PGY6). Resources most used for self-education were ASH SAP (85%), UpToDate (80%), and NCCN guidelines (50%). 100% of respondents agreed/strongly agreed that the FHC could be improved. 95% agreed/strongly agreed that there is a high degree of variability among consultants regarding engagement in fellows’ education. 45% agreed that education is adequately paired with relevant clinical duties to reinforce key concepts. 25% agreed that FHC had well-defined structure and objectives. In the open-ended responses, a structured curriculum covering a set list of topics paired with the relevant rotation was the most common recommendation by the fellows for improving the FHC and the inpatient hematology educational experience. This prompted a QI initiative to implement a structured, evidence-based curriculum covering essential topics required for hematology practice. Each week of a four-week rotation has a relevant theme (eg, “Marrow Failure week” during the inpatient leukemia service). Fellows selected a topic of interest and created a lecture to be used by all faculty and learners during the relevant rotation (eg, “Aplastic Anemia” during the Marrow Failure). Consultants and pharmacists in respective disease groups reviewed the topics and presentations. These lectures are now provided to fellows and faculty via e-mail prior to relevant rotations. Conclusions: Our survey demonstrated that trainees’ individual educational experiences on inpatient hematology services are widely variable and largely unsatisfying without some form of structured, relevant learning. We identified the need for deliberate, coordinated education as a gap to bridge toward achieving the goal of equitable, comprehensive learning. We intend to perform a post-implementation survey after one year of practicing a structured, relevantly paired FHC. This assessment will be used to make improvements in subsequent iterations of the FHC using the Plan-Do-Study-Act methodology.

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