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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 3/2021

14.01.2021 | Original Research

Internal Medicine Residents’ Perceptions of Morning Report: a Multicenter Survey

verfasst von: Tyler J. Albert, MD, Jeff Redinger, MD, Helene Starks, PhD MPH, Joel Bradley, MD, Craig G. Gunderson, MD, Dan Heppe, MD, Kyle Kent, MD, Michael Krug, MD, Brian Kwan, MD, James Laudate, MD, Amanda Pensiero, MD, Gina Raymond, MD, Emily Sladek, MD, Joseph R. Sweigart, MD, Paul B. Cornia, MD

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 3/2021

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Abstract

Background

Residents rate morning report (MR) as an essential educational activity. Little contemporary evidence exists to guide medical educators on the optimal content or most effective delivery strategies, particularly in the era of resident duty-hour limitations and shifts towards learner-centric pedagogy in graduate medical education.

Objective

Assess resident views about MR content and teaching strategies.

Design

Anonymous, online survey.

Participants

Internal medicine residents from 10 VA-affiliated residency programs.

Main Measures

The 20-item survey included questions on demographics; frequency and reason for attending; opinions on who should attend, who should teach, and how to prioritize the teaching; and respondents’ comfort level with participating in MR. The survey included a combination of Likert-style and multiple-choice questions with the option for multiple responses.

Key Results

A total of 497 residents (46%) completed the survey, with a balanced sample of R1s (33%), R2s (35%), and R3s (31%). Self-reported MR attendance was high (31% always attend; 39% attend > 50% of the time), with clinical duties being the primary barrier to attendance (85%). Most respondents felt that medical students (89%), R1 (96%), and R2/R3s (96%) should attend MR; there was less consensus regarding including attendings (61%) or fellows (34%). Top-rated educational topics included demonstration of clinical reasoning (82%), evidence-based medicine (77%), and disease pathophysiology (53%). Respondents valued time spent on diagnostic work-up (94%), management (93%), and differential building (90%). Overall, 82% endorsed feeling comfortable speaking; fewer R1s reported comfort (76%) compared with R2s (87%) or R3s (83%, p = 0.018). Most (81%) endorsed that MR was an inclusive learning environment (81%), with no differences by level of training.

Conclusions

MR remains a highly regarded, well-attended educational conference. Residents value high-quality cases that emphasize clinical reasoning, diagnosis, and management. A supportive, engaging learning environment with expert input and concise, evidence-based teaching is desired.
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Metadaten
Titel
Internal Medicine Residents’ Perceptions of Morning Report: a Multicenter Survey
verfasst von
Tyler J. Albert, MD
Jeff Redinger, MD
Helene Starks, PhD MPH
Joel Bradley, MD
Craig G. Gunderson, MD
Dan Heppe, MD
Kyle Kent, MD
Michael Krug, MD
Brian Kwan, MD
James Laudate, MD
Amanda Pensiero, MD
Gina Raymond, MD
Emily Sladek, MD
Joseph R. Sweigart, MD
Paul B. Cornia, MD
Publikationsdatum
14.01.2021
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 3/2021
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-06351-7

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