13 results on '"Wayne DB"'
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2. Continuity With Patients, Preceptors, and Peers Improves Primary Care Training: A Randomized Medical Education Trial.
- Author
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Henschen BL, Liss DT, Golden BP, Cameron KA, Bierman JA, Ryan ER, Gard LA, Neilson EG, Wayne DB, and Evans DB
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- Chicago, Clinical Clerkship statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Educational, Peer Group, Preceptorship statistics & numerical data, Program Evaluation, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Students, Medical statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Clinical Clerkship methods, Continuity of Patient Care statistics & numerical data, Curriculum, Education, Medical, Undergraduate methods, Preceptorship methods, Primary Health Care methods, Students, Medical psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: Infusing continuity of care into medical student clerkships may accelerate professional development, preserve patient-centered attitudes, and improve primary care training. However, prospective, randomized studies of longitudinal curricula are lacking., Method: All entering Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine students in 2015 and 2016 were randomized to the Education Centered Medical Home (ECMH), a 4-year, team-based primary care clerkship; or a mentored individual preceptorship (IP) for 2 years followed by a traditional 4-week primary care clerkship. Students were surveyed 4 times (baseline, M1, M2, and M3 year [through 2018]); surveys included the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI); the Communication, Curriculum, and Culture (C3) survey assessing the hidden curriculum; and the Attitudes Toward Health Care Teams (ATHCT) scale. The authors analyzed results using an intent-to-treat approach., Results: Three hundred twenty-nine students were randomized; 316 (96%) participated in surveys. Seventy percent of all respondents would recommend the ECMH to incoming first-year students. ECMH students reported a more positive learning environment (overall quality, 4.4 ECMH vs 4.0 IP, P < .001), greater team-centered attitudes (ATHCT scale, 3.2 vs 3.0, P = .007), less exposure to negative aspects of the hidden curriculum (C3 scale, 4.6 vs 4.3, P < .001), and comparable medical knowledge acquisition. ECMH students established more continuity relationships with patients (2.2 vs 0.3, P < .001) and reported significantly higher professional efficacy (MBI-PE, 4.1 vs 3.9, P = .02)., Conclusions: In this randomized medical education trial, the ECMH provided superior primary care training across multiple outcomes compared with a traditional clerkship-based model, including improved professional efficacy.
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- 2020
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3. Development of a Simulation-Based Mastery Learning Curriculum for Breaking Bad News.
- Author
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Vermylen JH, Wood GJ, Cohen ER, Barsuk JH, McGaghie WC, and Wayne DB
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- Clinical Competence, Humans, Communication, Curriculum, Patient Simulation, Students, Medical, Truth Disclosure
- Abstract
Introduction: Physician communication impacts patient outcomes. However, communication skills, especially around difficult conversations, remain suboptimal, and there is no clear way to determine the validity of entrustment decisions. The aims of this study were to 1) describe the development of a simulation-based mastery learning (SBML) curriculum for breaking bad news (BBN) conversation skills and 2) set a defensible minimum passing standard (MPS) to ensure uniform skill acquisition among learners., Innovation: An SBML BBN curriculum was developed for fourth-year medical students. An assessment tool was created to evaluate the acquisition of skills involved in a BBN conversation. Pilot testing was completed to confirm improvement in skill acquisition and set the MPS., Outcomes: A BBN assessment tool containing a 15-item checklist and six scaled items was developed. Students' checklist performance improved significantly at post-test compared to baseline (mean 65.33%, SD = 12.09% vs mean 88.67%, SD = 9.45%, P < 0.001). Students were also significantly more likely to have at least a score of 4 (on a five-point scale) for the six scaled questions at post-test. The MPS was set at 80%, requiring a score of 12 items on the checklist and at least 4 of 5 for each scaled item. Using the MPS, 30% of students would require additional training after post-testing., Comments: We developed a SBML curriculum with a comprehensive assessment of BBN skills and a defensible competency standard. Future efforts will expand the mastery model to larger cohorts and assess the impact of rigorous education on patient care outcomes., (Copyright © 2018 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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4. A Comparison of Approaches for Mastery Learning Standard Setting.
- Author
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Barsuk JH, Cohen ER, Wayne DB, McGaghie WC, and Yudkowsky R
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- Catheterization, Central Venous methods, Clinical Competence standards, Curriculum trends, Educational Measurement methods, Educational Measurement standards, Humans, Internal Medicine education, Jugular Veins surgery, Subclavian Artery surgery, Catheterization, Central Venous standards, Curriculum standards, Research Design standards
- Abstract
Purpose: Defensible minimum passing standards (MPSs) must be used to evaluate learner performance outcomes in health professions education. In this study, the authors compared the results of traditional Angoff and Hofstee standard-setting exercises with the Mastery Angoff and Patient-Safety approaches for central venous catheter (CVC) insertion skills examinations. The authors also evaluated how these standards affected the historical performance of residents who participated in a simulation-based mastery learning (SBML) curriculum for CVC insertion skills., Method: In April and May 2015, 12 physicians with expertise in CVC insertion set MPSs for previously published internal jugular (IJ) and subclavian (SC) CVC insertion checklists using Angoff, Hofstee, Mastery Angoff, and Patient-Safety approaches. The resulting MPSs were compared using historical performance of internal medicine and emergency medicine residents who participated in CVC insertion SBML., Results: The MPSs were set as follows: Angoff: IJ 91% checklist items correct, SC 90%. Hofstee: IJ 88%, SC 90%. Mastery Angoff: IJ 98%, SC 98%. Patient-Safety: IJ 98%, SC 98%. Based on the historical performance of 143 residents assessed on IJ and SC insertion, applying the 98% MPS would result in additional practice and retesting of 55/123 residents (45%) who had previously passed the IJ examination and 36/130 residents (28%) who had passed the SC examination using the Angoff and Hofstee MPSs., Conclusions: The Mastery Angoff and Patient-Safety standard-setting approaches resulted in higher CVC insertion SBML MPSs compared with traditional standard-setting methods. Further study should assess the impact of these more rigorous standards on patient outcomes.
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- 2018
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5. Developing a Simulation-Based Mastery Learning Curriculum: Lessons From 11 Years of Advanced Cardiac Life Support.
- Author
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Barsuk JH, Cohen ER, Wayne DB, Siddall VJ, and McGaghie WC
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- Educational Measurement, Humans, Models, Educational, United States, Advanced Cardiac Life Support education, Curriculum, Education, Medical, Graduate, Internal Medicine education
- Abstract
Statement: Curriculum development in medical education should follow a planned, systematic approach fitted to the needs and conditions of a local institutional environment and its learners. This article describes the development and maintenance of a simulation-based medical education curriculum on advanced cardiac life support skills and its transformation to a mastery learning program. Curriculum development used the Kern 6-step model involving problem identification and general needs assessment, targeted needs assessment, goals and objectives, educational strategies, implementation, and evaluation and feedback. Curriculum maintenance and enhancement and dissemination are also addressed. Transformation of the simulation-based medical education curriculum to a mastery learning program was accomplished after a 2-year phase-in trial. A series of studies spanning 11 years was performed to adjust the curriculum, improve checklist outcome measures, and evaluate curriculum effects as learning outcomes among internal medicine residents and improved patient care practices. We anticipate wide adoption of the mastery learning model for skill and knowledge acquisition and maintenance in medical education settings.
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- 2016
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6. Dissemination of an innovative mastery learning curriculum grounded in implementation science principles: a case study.
- Author
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McGaghie WC, Barsuk JH, Cohen ER, Kristopaitis T, and Wayne DB
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- Diffusion of Innovation, Hospitals, Community, Humans, Internship and Residency, Organizational Case Studies, Catheterization, Central Venous standards, Clinical Competence, Curriculum, Education, Medical, Continuing methods, Emergency Medicine education, Internal Medicine education, Learning, Models, Educational
- Abstract
Dissemination of a medical education innovation, such as mastery learning, from a setting where it has been used successfully to a new and different medical education environment is not easy. This article describes the uneven yet successful dissemination of a simulation-based mastery learning (SBML) curriculum on central venous catheter (CVC) insertion for internal medicine and emergency medicine residents across medical education settings. The dissemination program was grounded in implementation science principles. The article begins by describing implementation science which addresses the mechanisms of medical education and health care delivery. The authors then present a mastery learning case study in two phases: (1) the development, implementation, and evaluation of the SBML CVC curriculum at a tertiary care academic medical center; and (2) the dissemination of the SBML CVC curriculum to an academic community hospital setting. Contextual information about the drivers and barriers that affected the SBML CVC curriculum dissemination is presented. This work demonstrates that dissemination of mastery learning curricula, like all other medical education innovations, will fail without active educational leadership, personal contacts, dedication, hard work, rigorous measurement, and attention to implementation science principles. The article concludes by presenting a set of lessons learned about disseminating an SBML CVC curriculum across different medical education settings.
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- 2015
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7. Recommendations for Reporting Mastery Education Research in Medicine (ReMERM).
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Cohen ER, McGaghie WC, Wayne DB, Lineberry M, Yudkowsky R, and Barsuk JH
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- Humans, Research Design, Clinical Competence, Curriculum trends, Education, Medical trends, Guidelines as Topic, Learning, Models, Educational, Research
- Abstract
Guidelines for reporting several types of medical studies have been described in the literature. However, there are no current guidelines to report studies on mastery learning curriculum development and trainee evaluation in medical education. Such guidelines will be important because medical education is moving toward a competency-based model. The authors sought to define standards for the evaluation of mastery learning curricula using previously published guidelines in related fields and expert review.The authors reviewed previously published guidelines from clinical medicine, medical education, and the social sciences. Six authors with expertise in mastery learning curricula, performance assessment, and medical education compiled and reached agreement about a list of guidelines. The authors later circulated the list to 12 other experts and made revisions. A final list of guidelines was established and received group consensus. The Reporting Mastery Education Research in Medicine (ReMERM) guidelines have 22 categories with 38 items considered to be imperative for reporting a mastery learning research study. Details about each item, with a specific focus on those unique to mastery learning, are discussed.The ReMERM guidelines highlight the importance of developing rigorous curricula that embody reliable measures which yield valid decisions about achievement among medical learners. These guidelines should improve the quality of reporting and help educators, authors, peer reviewers, journal editors, and readers to better understand and evaluate mastery learning research. With this shift to competency-based medical education, the ReMERM guidelines should help meet medical educators' needs to achieve these new goals.
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- 2015
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8. A Missed Opportunity to Achieve Excellence in Residency Education.
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Wayne DB, Barsuk JH, and McGaghie WC
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- Female, Humans, Male, Clinical Competence, Computer-Assisted Instruction methods, Curriculum, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Family Practice education, Internal Medicine education, Internship and Residency methods
- Published
- 2015
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9. Progress toward improving medical school graduates' skills via a "boot camp" curriculum.
- Author
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Wayne DB, Cohen ER, Singer BD, Moazed F, Barsuk JH, Lyons EA, Butter J, and McGaghie WC
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Students, Medical, United States, Young Adult, Clinical Competence standards, Curriculum, Education, Medical, Graduate, Internal Medicine education, Patient Simulation, Teaching methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Medical school graduates are expected to possess a broad array of clinical skills. However, concerns have been raised regarding the preparation of medical students to enter graduate medical education. We designed a simulation-based "boot camp" experience for students entering internal medicine residency and compared medical student performance with the performance of historical controls who did not complete boot camp., Methods: This was a cohort study of a simulation-based boot camp educational intervention. Twenty medical students completed 2 days (16 hours) of small group simulation-based education and individualized feedback and skills assessment. Skills included (a) physical examination techniques (cardiac auscultation); technical procedures including (b) paracentesis and (c) lumbar puncture; (d) recognition and management of patients with life-threatening conditions (intensive care unit clinical skills/mechanical ventilation); and (e) communication with patients and families (code status discussion). Student posttest scores were compared with baseline scores of postgraduate year 1 (PGY-1) historical controls to assess the effectiveness of the intervention., Results: Boot camp-trained medical students performed significantly better than PGY-1 historical controls on each simulated skill (P<0.01). Results remained significant after controlling for age, sex, and US Medical Licensing Examination step 1 and 2 scores (P<0.001)., Conclusions: A 2-day simulation-based boot camp for graduating medical students boosted a variety of clinical skills to levels significantly higher than PGY-1 historical controls. Simulation-based education shows promise to help ensure that medical school graduates are prepared to begin postgraduate training.
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- 2014
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10. The patient centered medical home as curricular model: perceived impact of the "education-centered medical home".
- Author
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Henschen BL, Garcia P, Jacobson B, Ryan ER, Woods DM, Wayne DB, and Evans DB
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- Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Perception, Pilot Projects, Clinical Clerkship methods, Curriculum, Models, Educational, Patient-Centered Care methods, Students, Medical
- Abstract
Background: The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model aims to provide patient-centered care, lower costs, and improve health outcomes. Medical students have not been meaningfully integrated in this model., Aim: To test the feasibility of a longitudinal clerkship based on PCMH principles and anchored by PCMH educational objectives., Setting: Two community-based family medicine clinics, one academic internal medicine clinic, and one pediatric clinic affiliated with an urban medical school., Participants: 56 medical student volunteers., Program Description: We embedded student teams in existing faculty practices and recruited a high-risk patient panel for each team. Clinical education occurred through a traditional clinic preceptor model and was augmented by 3rd and 4th year students directly observing 1st and 2nd year students. Didactic content included monthly Grand Rounds conferences., Program Evaluation: Students attended 699 clinics, recruited 273 continuity patients, and participated in 9 Grand Rounds conferences. Student confidence with PCMH principles increased and attitudes regarding continuity were highly positive. "Continuity," "early clinical exposure," and "peer teaching" were the most powerful themes expressed by students. Faculty response to the pilot was highly positive., Discussion: An Education-Centered Medical Home (ECMH) is feasible and is highly rated by students and faculty. Expansion of this model is underway.
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- 2013
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11. Medical education featuring mastery learning with deliberate practice can lead to better health for individuals and populations.
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McGaghie WC, Issenberg SB, Cohen ER, Barsuk JH, and Wayne DB
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- Education, Medical, Graduate organization & administration, Education, Medical, Undergraduate organization & administration, Forecasting, Health Status, Humans, Learning, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Schools, Medical organization & administration, United States, Clinical Competence, Competency-Based Education organization & administration, Curriculum, Education, Medical organization & administration, Public Health
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- 2011
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12. Evaluating and enhancing a women's health curriculum in an internal medicine residency program.
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Wayne DB and DaRosa DA
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- Chicago, Female, Humans, Male, Program Evaluation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Curriculum standards, Internal Medicine education, Internship and Residency, Women's Health
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Objective: Resident education in women's health is required but is often underemphasized. Our aim was to identify women's health topics with the most relevance to our graduates' practices and to determine how well they were prepared to address women's health issues., Design: Postgraduate survey., Setting: University-affiliated internal medicine residency program., Participants: Program graduates in general internal medicine practice., Methods: A survey was drafted listing the 65 topics described in a published residency curriculum in women's health. Respondents indicated the extent to which each item was relevant to their practice and the adequacy of instruction received on a Likert-type scale of 1 (not relevant/inadequate) to 5 (highly relevant/adequate)., Results: The response rate was 86%. Many of the items were highly relevant to our graduates' practices. Learning needs were found in all areas as none of the topics were rated as "adequately" taught during residency. Many areas in the curriculum had low relevance scores. Few differences were seen in the perceived relevance of women's health problems or the adequacy of instruction received based on gender, practice type and setting, or amount of ambulatory training during residency., Conclusions: Use of this survey has allowed us to tailor and prioritize learning issues in women's health to meet the needs of our graduates. Increased time in ambulatory rotations alone may not be sufficient to prepare residents to provide comprehensive care in this field. Further study of the effectiveness of a dedicated curriculum in women's heath is needed.
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- 2004
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13. Developing an ethics curriculum for an internal medicine residency program: use of a needs assessment.
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Wayne DB, Muir JC, and DaRosa DA
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- Chicago, Data Collection, Humans, Internal Medicine ethics, Attitude of Health Personnel, Curriculum, Ethics, Medical education, Internal Medicine education, Internship and Residency ethics, Needs Assessment
- Abstract
Background: Residency programs are required to teach and evaluate trainees in the area of professionalism and medical ethics. Prior to developing a curriculum in this area, residents and fellows were surveyed to assess learning needs., Description: A case-based survey was developed based on published curricula. Residents and fellows were asked to describe their comfort level in 11 clinical scenarios on a Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (not at all comfortable) to 10 (extremely comfortable)., Evaluation: 151 surveys were returned for an overall response rate of 73%. Comfort levels ranged from a low of 3.1 to a high of 8.5 on the 10-point scale. Despite additional years of clinical training, fellows only reported an increased comfort level in 1 case., Conclusion: Learning needs exist in residents and fellows in the area of medical ethics. Use of a needs assessment was instrumental in planning and designing an ethics curriculum.
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- 2004
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