37
R esident E ducator D evelopment The RED Program A Residents-as-Teachers Curriculum Developed by Heather A. Thompson, MD

R esident E ducator D evelopment

  • Upload
    pekelo

  • View
    25

  • Download
    3

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

R esident E ducator D evelopment. The RED Program A Residents-as-Teachers Curriculum Developed by Heather A. Thompson, MD. The RED Program. Team Leadership How to Teach at the Bedside The Microskills Model: Teaching during Oral Presentations How to Teach EBM The Ten Minute Talk - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: R esident E ducator D evelopment

ResidentEducatorDevelopment

The RED ProgramA Residents-as-Teachers CurriculumDeveloped by Heather A. Thompson, MD

Page 2: R esident E ducator D evelopment

The RED Program• Team Leadership• How to Teach at the Bedside• The Microskills Model: Teaching during

Oral Presentations• How to Teach EBM• The Ten Minute Talk• Effective Feedback• Professionalism• Patient Safety and Medical Errors

Page 3: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Teaching at the Bedside

Resident Educator

Development (RED) Program

Page 4: R esident E ducator D evelopment

“Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the classroom. Let not your

conceptions of disease come form words heard in the lecture room or read from a book. See, then reason and compare and

control, but see first.” Sir William Osler

Page 5: R esident E ducator D evelopment

An exercise• Recall a bedside teaching session

that was effective. What made it go well?

• Recall a bedside teaching session were learning was minimal. What made this session ineffective?

Page 6: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Why Teach at the Bedside?

Page 7: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Why Teach at the Bedside?

• Reinforces skills of medical interviewing, communication, and patient education.

• Opportunity to observe, teach, and practice physical exam skills.

• Contributes to a greater understanding of patient’s needs.

Page 8: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Why Teach at the Bedside?

• Sets the tone for professional interaction between patients and teams in a teaching hospital.

• Often the first encounter with “real live” patients for the medical students.

• You need to see and examine your patients every day; may as well make the most of the encounter!

Page 9: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Is there data?

• Survey of Australian Medical Students and Residents:

--99% agreed that bedside teaching was valuable and effective for teaching PE skills --HOWEVER only 53% stated they had enough bedside teaching to improve their PE skills--Medical Education Sept 1997 31(5): 341-346

Page 10: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Is there data?

• Actual time spent at the bedside is decreasing: 15-25% of total time on wards

• Attendings at the bedside a frequency of once every 2-4 days

Annals Int Med 1997 126 (7): 217-220JAMA 1986 256:725-739J Med Educ. 1982 57:854-859

Page 11: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Is there data?

• Survey in JGIM:--88% of attendings prefer that cases NOT be presented at bedside

• Survey out of MCOW: --only 2% of housestaff and 4% of students feel comfortable presenting at bedside

• Why is this happening?

Page 12: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Barriers

• Focus groups at Boston University have identified barriers to bedside teaching, broken down by category. Academic Medicine April 2003 78(4):384-390

Page 13: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Teacher-Related• Inexperience with bedside

teaching• Lack of confidence in physical

exam skills• Performance pressure

Page 14: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Teacher-Related• Lack of control over situation• Difficulty in engaging all team

members

Page 15: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Teaching Climate-Related• Time constraints: too many

patients to see on morning rounds, limited time for H&P

• Lack of training in bedside skills

• Lack of teaching role models

Page 16: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Systems-Related• Too many interruptions (phone calls,

visitors, lab draw, trip to radiology)• Shortened patient stays: average

length of stay is 3 days• Technology: overabundance of data

to discuss (scans, lab tests) rather than the patient’s symptoms and physical exam signs

Page 17: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Patient-related (perception vs. reality?)

• Patients not comfortable being discussed by a large team

• Patient too medically unstable to cooperate with history or exam

• Absent patient• Patient misinterpretation of

discussion • Uncooperative/angry patient

Page 18: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Miscellaneous• Learner fatigue, boredom• Fear of being called upon • Privacy Issues (HIPPA)• Physical environment:

--large crowd in a small room--no blackboard/Xray view box

--inability to refer to textbook, computer resources, lit seach

Page 19: R esident E ducator D evelopment

General Strategies• Improve Your PE skills

--Working up patients--Program Workshops --Physical Diagnosis Textbooks, CDs--Professor’s Rounds/Chief Resident Rounds--Mini-CEX: an observed physical--Participating in an OSCE

Page 20: R esident E ducator D evelopment

General Strategies• Diminish the aura of bedside teaching

“You may not be an expert but you still know a fair amount…even as a junior clinician. You can’t get everything, but you can still get more than you did as a third year student.”--Boston U Focus Group Participant“You don’t need gray hair (or lack of hair) to teach at the bedside.”--Former U Chief Resident

Page 21: R esident E ducator D evelopment

General Strategies• Use laptops or PDAs at the bedside

--Lit searches/EBM--UptoDate--Info Retriever--Clinical prediction rules, likelihood ratios, pos predictive values

Page 22: R esident E ducator D evelopment

General Strategies• Realize that most patients enjoy

bedside teaching rounds--77% found the experience

enjoyable --68% found that it increased their understanding of their medical problems (NEJM 1997 336:1150-5)

Page 23: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Before Encounter: Prepare

• Formulate specific goals and objectives for each session.

• Read up on the topic/technique.• Choose the patient wisely.• Orient the patient to the purpose

and format.

Page 24: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Before Encounter: Teaching considerations

• Discuss what one might expect to find on PE in certain disease states.

• Discuss how to elicit these PE findings. (demonstrate on a volunteer)

• Discuss sensitivity/specificity, PPV/NPV

Page 25: R esident E ducator D evelopment

During the Encounter: Patient considerations

• Begin and end with the patient.• Opening lines: “Tell us what

brought you in the hospital.” “Can you describe how you are feeling today?”

• Close with: “What questions do you have for us?” “What is it that you want most from the doctors caring for you?”

Page 26: R esident E ducator D evelopment

During the Encounter: Patient considerations

• Try to have as many people SEATED in the room as possible during the initial interview.

• Explain to the patient during rounds when you are going to use medical jargon, or avoid shoptalk altogether.

Page 27: R esident E ducator D evelopment

During the Encounter: Patient considerations

• Be careful about listing a differential diagnosis, such as “cancer”.

• Avoid asking a question of the group that they might not be able to answer: undermines patient confidence.

Page 28: R esident E ducator D evelopment

During the Encounter: Teaching considerations

• In a larger group: shift from open-ended (“listen to the heart and tell me what you hear”) to directive (“listen with the diaphragm at the LUSB where you will hear a blowing diastolic murmur consistent with aortic insufficiency”)

Page 29: R esident E ducator D evelopment

During the Encounter: Teaching considerations

• Goal is to gain some experience with a certain PE finding as opposed to evaluating learner’s technique

• Establish a comfortable environment (it’s OK to say “I don’t know” or “I don’t hear it”)

Page 30: R esident E ducator D evelopment

After: Debrief• The group should leave the

bedside, and observations are made as to what was seen.

• Learners should have time to ask questions, and give and receive feedback.

Page 31: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Admitting a Patient• One on one, with your intern or student

--helps to be the “Fly on the Wall” (observer) or the “Midwife” (lets the process happen, intervenes at critical moments)--Again, review beforehand what PE findings you might expect --This is the opportunity to assess learner’s specific skills or technique, give feedback

Page 32: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Admitting a Patient• With your student

--Often, they want to know “how much” of the PE needs to be done--Remember, in 2nd year medical school an exhaustive 2+ hour exam is taught--Students need to learn how to tailor the exam to the presenting problem--They also want to know how to “remember” all the elements of the admit H&P

Page 33: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Admitting a Patient• Medical Student Strategies

--Refer to templates.--Can teach the “top down” or “head to toe” approach by body areas: general appearance, HEENT, Heart, Lungs, Abd, Extremities (peripheral pulses/edema/joints), Skin, Neuro. --Expand on any one area based on symptoms or abnormal findings.

(FYI: 8+ covers billing, too)

Page 34: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Daily Work Rounds• Again, always consider the patient

--Sitting down patient overestimates time spent with MDs

• Opportunity to model communication skills/“bedside manner”

• Review new or fixed findings with other team members

• Can review or demonstrate a specific technique

Page 35: R esident E ducator D evelopment

Video Exercise• View the bedside teaching rounds

represented in this video vignette• Discuss what went well, and what

could be improved upon

Page 36: R esident E ducator D evelopment

In summary• Go to the bedside with a specific

purpose• Teach PE skills when the

opportunity arises• Model communication skills• Maintain a comfortable and

positive environment for the patient, learners, and you

Page 37: R esident E ducator D evelopment

In summaryThere should be “no teaching without a

patient for a text, and the best is that taught by the patient himself.” --Sir William Osler