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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 12/2020

10.08.2020 | Original Research

A Multicenter VA Study of the Format and Content of Internal Medicine Morning Report

verfasst von: Daniel B. Heppe, MD, Albertine S. Beard, MD, Paul B. Cornia, MD, Tyler J. Albert, MD, Azadeh Lankarani-Fard, MD, Joel M. Bradley, MD, Michelle M. Guidry, MD, Brian Kwan, MD, Anand Jagannath, MD, Matthew Tuck, MD, Kathlyn E. Fletcher, MD, Elizabeth S. Gromisch, Ph.D., Craig G. Gunderson, MD

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 12/2020

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Abstract

Background

There are more than five hundred internal medicine residency programs in the USA, involving 27,000 residents. Morning report is a central educational activity in resident education, but no recent studies describe its format or content.

Objective

To describe the format and content of internal medicine morning reports.

Design and Participants

Prospective observational study of morning reports occurring between September 1, 2018, and April 30, 2019, in ten different VA academic medical centers in the USA.

Main Measures

Report format, number and type of learner, number and background of attending, frequency of learner participation, and the type of media used. Content areas including quality and safety, high-value care, social determinants of health, evidence-based medicine, ethics, and bedside teaching. For case-based reports, the duration of different aspects of the case was recorded, the ultimate diagnosis when known, and if the case was scripted or unscripted.

Results

A total of 225 morning reports were observed. Reports were predominantly case-based, moderated by a chief resident, utilized digital presentation slides, and involved a range of learners including medicine residents, medical students, and non-physician learners. The most common attending physician present was a hospitalist. Reports typically involved a single case, which the chief resident reviewed prior to report and prepared a teaching presentation using digital presentation slides. One-half of cases were categorized as either rare or life-threatening. The most common category of diagnosis was medication side effects. Quality and safety, high-value care, social determinants of health, and evidence-based medicine were commonly discussed. Medical ethics was rarely addressed.

Conclusions

Although a wide range of formats and content were described, internal medicine morning report most commonly involves a single case that is prepared ahead of time by the chief resident, uses digital presentation slides, and emphasizes history, differential diagnosis, didactics, and rare or life-threatening diseases.
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Metadaten
Titel
A Multicenter VA Study of the Format and Content of Internal Medicine Morning Report
verfasst von
Daniel B. Heppe, MD
Albertine S. Beard, MD
Paul B. Cornia, MD
Tyler J. Albert, MD
Azadeh Lankarani-Fard, MD
Joel M. Bradley, MD
Michelle M. Guidry, MD
Brian Kwan, MD
Anand Jagannath, MD
Matthew Tuck, MD
Kathlyn E. Fletcher, MD
Elizabeth S. Gromisch, Ph.D.
Craig G. Gunderson, MD
Publikationsdatum
10.08.2020
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 12/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-06069-6

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