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Impact of Longitudinal Mechanical Ventilation Curriculum on Decay of Knowledge.

Authors :
Keller M
Acho M
Sun J
Kriner E
Seam N
Lee BW
Source :
ATS scholar [ATS Sch] 2024 Oct 30; Vol. 5 (2), pp. 302-310. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Oct 30 (Print Publication: 2024).
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Prior evidence suggests that critical care trainees and attendings may have trouble recognizing common, potentially life-threatening mechanical ventilation (MV) waveform asynchronies. Although dedicated workshops may improve knowledge in MV, this knowledge may be prone to decay over time. Longitudinal, preceptorial-based curriculums may prevent this decay in knowledge.<br />Objective: To determine if the addition of a year-long, longitudinal MV preceptorial curriculum to a two-part, small-group, simulation-based education block curriculum reduces decay in MV knowledge compared with the education block curriculum alone.<br />Methods: This was a multicenter prospective cohort study including 123 first-year fellows from 12 critical care fellowship programs who completed a two-part simulation-based education block (control) after the first and sixth months of fellowship. Fellows from one of these programs also participated in a year-long preceptorial curriculum (intervention). MV waveform examination scores over time during fellowship were compared between control versus intervention groups.<br />Results: Mean test scores increased for both control and intervention groups after the education block courses at Months 1 and 6 of fellowship. Mean (standard deviation) test scores at Month 12 were higher for the intervention group than the control group (89.3 [14.8] vs. 47.7 [21.4]; P  < 0.0001). Between 6 months and 3 years of fellowship, there was a significant decay in test scores for the control group (slope estimate [standard error], -13.4 [1.7]; P  < 0.0001). However, there was no significant decay in test scores for the intervention group (slope estimate, -2.0 [4.7]; P  = 0.67; difference in slope estimates, 11.4 [5.0]; P  = 0.02).<br />Conclusion: The ability of critical care fellows to identify MV waveform asynchronies declines over fellowship training, despite a dedicated two-part, simulation-based MV educational curriculum. The addition of an MV preceptorial course decreased decay of MV knowledge over the course of fellowship training.<br /> (Copyright © 2024 by the American Thoracic Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2690-7097
Volume :
5
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ATS scholar
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39479530
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.34197/ats-scholar.2023-0051IN