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Analysis of the Emergency Medicine Clinical Learning Environment
- Source :
- AEM Educ Train
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Background Residencies are grappling with ways to identify methods to internally monitor and improve their learning environments. Building on prior work, the objective of this study was to determine emergency medicine (EM) internal evaluations of perceived organizational support and psychological safety and compare to the results from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Resident Survey for the purpose of program improvement and to explore factors affecting residents' perception of their learning environment. Methods In 2017, the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine Office of Graduate Medical Education and Office of Quality and Safety conducted an in-person, anonymous safety survey of the residents across 19 residency programs on the Short Survey of Perceived Organizational Support (SPOS) and Psychological Safety Scale (PSS). These were compared to the ACGME Resident Survey for 19 programs. Resident interviews and open response evaluation data informed content analysis on program experiences. Results Institutional response rates were 63% for the internal learning environment survey and 96% for ACGME Resident Safety Survey. EM residents responded positively on the SPOS and PSS compared to other programs (ranked second highest scores on both scales). One-hundred percent of respondents agreed or strongly agreed on SPOS items: "Help is available from my department when I have a problem." "My department really cares about my well-being." "My department values my contribution to its well-being." Furthermore, EM had the highest overall training experience score (mean = 4.83) on the ACGME survey compared to the 18 other training programs. Qualitative responses suggest program strengths included supportive program leadership, positive working relationships with faculty, and emphasis on trainee wellness. Conclusions Compared to other programs, EM has created a positive environment of safety and support as perceived by their residents. Internal surveys of the learning environment can help programs understand their culture for purposes of improvement and align with the ACGME survey.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Learning environment
Brief Contributions
education
Graduate medical education
MEDLINE
Psychological safety
Emergency Nursing
Education
Content analysis
Scale (social sciences)
Emergency medicine
Emergency Medicine
medicine
Psychology
Perceived organizational support
Accreditation
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 24725390
- Volume :
- 3
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- AEM education and training
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....834f94e022f209b0a3e0326bea12b654