PM & R : the journal of injury, function, and rehabilitation
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Multicenter Study
Exploring systems-based practice in a sample of physical medicine and rehabilitation residency programs.
This study explores physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R) residents' attitudes, knowledge, and perception of health care policy in the context of systems-based practice, one of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education's core competencies for residency training. ⋯ Systems-based practice is a core requirement of residency training yet has not been extensively studied. This study suggests that residents find systems-based issues important to their overall education but are not sufficiently or effectively addressed in residency. The healthcare delivery environment including PM&R is rapidly changing. It is imperative that residents are equipped with the knowledge of and ability to adapt to these changes.
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The authors sought to define the relationship between gender and postconcussion symptoms (PCSx) at 3 months after sport-related mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and, further, to examine whether age (minors vs. adults), source of PCSx reporting (self-reported vs. proxy), previous head injury or loss of consciousness, or the sport type in which the mTBI was incurred explain any observed gender differences in PCSx. ⋯ Adult females, but not female minors, are at increased risk for PCSx after sport-related mTBI as compared with male patients. This increased risk cannot be explained by self-report, rather than proxy report, of symptoms, previous head injury or loss of consciousness, age, or sport characteristics. Further research is needed to elucidate the processes of age-differential recovery from mild brain injury in women and on how to most effectively incorporate appropriate follow-up after emergency department evaluation.