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A Novel Ambulatory Curriculum for Pulmonary and Critical Care Fellowship Training
Background: Dedicated ambulatory training during pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowships is often limited. A novel 2-year longitudinal outpatient pulmonary fellowship curriculum was previously developed, piloted, and studied. The exportability and potential impact of this ambulatory...
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Published in: | ATS scholar 2021-06, Vol.2 (2), p.265-277 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background:
Dedicated ambulatory training during pulmonary and
critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowships is often limited. A novel 2-year
longitudinal outpatient pulmonary fellowship curriculum was previously
developed, piloted, and studied. The exportability and potential impact of this
ambulatory curriculum on PCCM fellowship training nationally is not known.
Objective:
We aim to understand the current state of ambulatory
training in PCCM fellowships and the impact of a standardized outpatient
curriculum on fellows’ ambulatory knowledge and competency.
Methods:
Nineteen programs participated in the study from 2017 to
2019. Six programs received the first year of content, seven programs received
the entire 2-year curriculum, and seven programs served as a control. Fellows,
faculty, and program directors (PDs) completed a series of surveys assessing
satisfaction with ambulatory education and the curriculum. Fellows completed a
series of medical knowledge inventories, and programs submitted in-training exam
scores.
Results:
A total of 221 fellows (39%) and 17 PDs (89%)
completed the precurriculum surveys, and 38 (12%) fellows and 10
(53%) PDs completed postcurriculum surveys. Before curriculum
implementation, only 34.4% of fellows rated the quality of their
ambulatory education as good or outstanding compared with 57.9% at the
end of the study. Eighty-five percent of faculty and 89% of PDs rated the
curriculum as good or excellent. Faculty believed that the teaching scripts were
easy to use (78.4%), were factually accurate (86.3%), and provided
high-yield information (82.1%). The majority of PDs indicated that the
curriculum positively impacted patient care (78%) and fulfilled an unmet
educational need (100%), and most planned to continue the curriculum
after the study (78%). Feedback surrounded the need for updated content
based on recently published guidelines and studies.
Conclusion:
The curriculum is a standardized and feasible way to
address a previously unmet need in PCCM fellowship education. PDs rated the
curriculum highly and most plan to continue it in the future. Our limited data
set suggests that the curriculum was well received by fellows and faculty and
positively impacted perceptions of ambulatory education and preparedness for
independent practice. Future study with a larger sample of fellows is needed to
better understand the generalizability of these findings. |
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ISSN: | 2690-7097 2690-7097 |
DOI: | 10.34197/ats-scholar.2020-0162OC |