• J Hosp Med · Apr 2019

    Internal Medicine Residents' Exposure to and Confidence in Managing Hospital Acute Clinical Events.

    • Alyssa Sclafani, Paul Currier, Yuchiao Chang, Ersne Eromo, Daniel Raemer, and Eli M Miloslavsky.
    • Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
    • J Hosp Med. 2019 Apr 1; 14 (4): 218-223.

    BackgroundInternal Medicine (IM) residency graduates should be able to manage hospital emergencies, but the rare and critical nature of such events poses an educational challenge. IM residents' exposure to inpatient acute clinical events is currently unknown.ObjectiveWe developed an instrument to assess IM residents' exposure to and confidence in managing hospital acute clinical events.MethodsWe administered a survey to all IM residents at our institution assessing their exposure to and confidence in managing 50 inpatient acute clinical events. Exposures assessed included mannequin-based simulation or management of hospital-based events as a part of a team or independently in a leadership role. Confidence was rated on a five-point scale and dichotomized to "confident" versus "not confident." Results were analyzed by multivariable logistic regression to assess the relationship between exposure and confidence accounting for year in training.ResultsA total of 140 of 170 IM residents (82%) responded. Postgraduate year 1 (PGY-1) residents had managed 31.3% of acute events independently vs 71.7% of events for PGY-3/4 residents (P < .0001). In multivariable analysis, residents' confidence increased with level of training (PGY-1 residents were confident to manage 24.9% of events vs 72.5% of events for PGY-3/4 residents, P < .0001) and level of exposure, independent of training year (P = .001). Events with the lowest levels of exposure and confidence for graduating residents were identified.ConclusionsIM residents' confidence in managing inpatient acute events correlated with level of training and clinical exposure. We identified events with low levels of resident exposure and confidence that can serve as targets for future curriculum development.

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