• Am J Emerg Med · Jul 2023

    Observational Study

    Four- and three-year emergency medicine residency graduates perform similarly in their first year of practice compared to experienced physicians.

    • Dhimitri A Nikolla, Mark S Zocchi, Jesse M Pines, Amy H Kaji, Arvind Venkat, Michael S Beeson, and Jestin N Carlson.
    • US Acute Care Solutions, Canton, OH, United States of America; Department of Emergency Medicine, Allegheny Health Network, Erie, PA, United States of America. Electronic address: dhimitri.nikolla@med.lecom.edu.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2023 Jul 1; 69: 100107100-107.

    IntroductionUnited States emergency medicine (EM) post-graduate training programs vary in training length, either 4 or 3 years. However, it is unknown if clinical care by graduates from the two curricula differs in the early post-residency period.MethodsWe performed a retrospective observational study comparing measures of clinical care and practice patterns between new graduates from 4- and 3-year EM programs with experienced new physician hires as a reference group. We included emergency department (ED) encounters from a national EM group (2016-19) between newly hired physicians from 4- and 3- year programs and experienced new hires (>2 years' experience) during their first year of practice with the group. Primary outcomes were at the physician-shift level (patients per hour and relative value units [RVUs] per hour) and encounter-level (72-h return visits with admission/transfer and discharge length of stay [LOS]). Secondary outcomes included discharge opioid prescription rates, test ordering, computer tomography (CT) use, and admission/transfer rate. We compared outcomes using multivariable linear regression models that included patient, shift, and facility-day characteristics, and a facility fixed effect. We hypothesized that experienced new hires would be most efficient, followed by new 4-year graduates and then new 3-year graduates.ResultsWe included 1,084,085 ED encounters by 4-year graduates (n = 39), 3-year graduates (n = 70), and experienced new hires (n = 476). There were no differences in physician-level and encounter-level primary outcomes except discharge LOS was 10.60 min (2.551, 18.554) longer for 4-year graduates compared to experienced new hires. Secondary outcomes were similar among the three groups except 4- and 3-year new graduates were less likely to prescribe opioids to discharged patients, -3.70% (-5.768, -1.624) and - 3.38% (-5.136, -1.617) compared to experienced new hires.ConclusionsIn this sample, measures of clinical care and practice patterns related to efficiency, safety, and flow were largely similar between the physician groups; however, experienced new hires were more likely to prescribe opioids than new graduates. These results do not support recommending a specific length of residency training in EM.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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