Increasing Pediatric Morning Report Educational Value Through Quality Improvement.


Journal

Pediatrics
ISSN: 1098-4275
Titre abrégé: Pediatrics
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0376422

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 07 2022
Historique:
accepted: 24 01 2022
pubmed: 23 6 2022
medline: 6 7 2022
entrez: 22 6 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Morning report (MR) is a common case-based conference in graduate medical education. Recent studies highlight participant dissatisfaction with the educational value of MR, but data are lacking on means for improvement. We aimed to increase MR quality and participant satisfaction at our academic pediatric residency program. Improvement science was used to develop and implement a new standardized pediatric MR process (intervention), with 5 core educational elements and structured resident-faculty mentorship. Educational elements were measured via feedback forms and tracked using a run chart. Residents and faculty were surveyed regarding MR quality and satisfaction at baseline and 6 months postintervention; responses were analyzed using mixed effects logistic regression. The median of educational elements increased from 3 to 5 (5 maximum) during the 6-month study period and 12-months poststudy. Baseline and postintervention survey response rates were 90% (18 of 20) for residents and 66% (51 of 77) for faculty. Residents reporting high quality MR changed from 50% to 72% (P = .20), and faculty from 29% to 85% (P <.001). Satisfaction with MR content increased for both residents (50%-89%, P = .03) and faculty (25%-67%, P <.001). Resident satisfaction with faculty mentorship before MR increased from 28% to 78% (P = .01); satisfaction with faculty feedback after MR increased from 11% to 56% (P = .02). Improvement science can be used to develop a new pediatric graduate medical education process. Requiring core educational elements and providing structured mentorship were associated with improvements in pediatric MR quality and participant satisfaction.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Morning report (MR) is a common case-based conference in graduate medical education. Recent studies highlight participant dissatisfaction with the educational value of MR, but data are lacking on means for improvement. We aimed to increase MR quality and participant satisfaction at our academic pediatric residency program.
METHODS
Improvement science was used to develop and implement a new standardized pediatric MR process (intervention), with 5 core educational elements and structured resident-faculty mentorship. Educational elements were measured via feedback forms and tracked using a run chart. Residents and faculty were surveyed regarding MR quality and satisfaction at baseline and 6 months postintervention; responses were analyzed using mixed effects logistic regression.
RESULTS
The median of educational elements increased from 3 to 5 (5 maximum) during the 6-month study period and 12-months poststudy. Baseline and postintervention survey response rates were 90% (18 of 20) for residents and 66% (51 of 77) for faculty. Residents reporting high quality MR changed from 50% to 72% (P = .20), and faculty from 29% to 85% (P <.001). Satisfaction with MR content increased for both residents (50%-89%, P = .03) and faculty (25%-67%, P <.001). Resident satisfaction with faculty mentorship before MR increased from 28% to 78% (P = .01); satisfaction with faculty feedback after MR increased from 11% to 56% (P = .02).
CONCLUSIONS
Improvement science can be used to develop a new pediatric graduate medical education process. Requiring core educational elements and providing structured mentorship were associated with improvements in pediatric MR quality and participant satisfaction.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35730343
pii: 188309
doi: 10.1542/peds.2021-053103
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2022 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Auteurs

Anna Zuckerman (A)

Department of Pediatrics.
Montefiore Bronx Health Collective, Bronx, New York.

Keith J Robinson (KJ)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

Sarah A Twichell (SA)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

Nicholas Bonenfant (N)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

Shelly Naud (S)

Biomedical Statistics Research Core, University of Vermont Larner College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont.

K Elisabeth Runte (KE)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

Sarah Couser (S)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

Lewis R First (LR)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

Jonathan N Flyer (JN)

Department of Pediatrics.
University of Vermont Children's Hospital, Burlington, Vermont.

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Classifications MeSH