• Resp Care · Mar 2011

    Impact of offering continuing respiratory care education credit hours on staff participation in a respiratory care journal club.

    • Carl R Hinkson, Nirpalinder Kaur, Michael W Sipes, and David J Pierson.
    • Respiratory Care Department, Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA. gooddog@u.washington.edu
    • Resp Care. 2011 Mar 1;56(3):303-5.

    BackgroundJournal clubs are employed by education and healthcare institutions to facilitate learning about study design, to teach critical reading of the literature, and to help trainees and practitioners keep abreast in their fields. Our respiratory care department initiated a journal club that was open to all respiratory therapists in the community. The articles were selected by the journal club coordinator and posted on the club's web site. However, attendance remained poor despite changes in venue, time, and day of the week. In Washington State, respiratory therapists are required to obtain continuing respiratory care education credits (CRCEs), so we hypothesized that offering American Association for Respiratory Care CRCEs for journal club attendance would increase participation.MethodsWe measured journal club attendance during the 8 months preceding and the 8 months following introduction of CRCE credit for journal club attendance. The journal club meetings were held during same time frame, on the same day of the week, and in the same geographic region during the pre-CRCE and CRCE periods. Advertising for the journal club was the same during both periods as well.ResultsPre-CRCE attendance ranged from 5 to 8 persons per meeting (mean ± SD 6 ± 1 persons), and CRCE-period attendance ranged from 7 to 10 persons (mean ± SD 8 ± 1) (P = .01).ConclusionsProviding CRCE credits for attendance was associated with increased participation in our departmental journal club.

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