Introduction Procedural training is a universal concern amongst pediatric residents and their teachers. We developed and implemented formative assessments to generate direct and indirect procedural feedback. We analyzed changes in residents’ perceived procedural knowledge, skills, confidence, and entrustment. Methods Senior pediatric residents rotating in the pediatric emergency department participated in video-recorded formative assessments of informed consent OSCEs and simulated toddler forehead laceration repair and infant lumbar puncture. Residents reflected on their perceived procedural knowledge, skills, confidence, and entrustment through Likert and entrustment scales. Secondary outcomes of formative assessment completion rates and proportions of procedures performed by pediatric residents tracked feasibility and potential clinical impact, respectively. Results Including the pilot period, 89% of residents (31 out of 35) received direct and indirect procedural feedback. Perceived composite competency and entrustment improved for laceration repair (competency: from 3.1 to 3.9, p < .001; entrustment: from 4.0 to 5.1, p < .001) and lumbar puncture (competency: from 3.5 to 4.0, p < .001; entrustment: from 4.6 to 5.6, p = .001). We observed an increase in the proportion of clinical laceration repairs (11% [97 out of 885] vs. 23% [218 out of 946], p < .001) and lumbar punctures (23% [12 out of 54] vs. 41% [21 out of 52], p = .05) performed by pediatric residents. Discussion Integrating feasible procedural formative assessments into the pediatric emergency department rotation had a positive impact on senior pediatric residents’ perceptions of their procedural knowledge, skills, confidence, and entrustment and was associated with increased procedural engagement.
Objective: Our primary aim was to describe pediatric residents' use of a workplace procedural training cart. An exploratory aim was to examine if the cart associated with increased resident procedural experiences with real patients.Methods: Guided by the procedural training construct of "Learn, See, Practice, Prove, Do, Maintain," we created a novel workplace procedural training cart with videos (learn and see) and simulation equipment (practice and prove). An electronic logbook recorded resident use data, and a brief survey solicited residents' perceptions of the cart's educational impact. We queried our electronic medical record to compare the proportion of real procedures completed by residents before and after the intervention. Results:From August 1 to December 31, 2019, 24 pediatric residents (10 interns and 14 seniors) rotated in the pediatric emergency department. Twenty-one cart encounters were logged, mostly by interns (67% [14/21]). The 21 cart encounters yielded 32 learning activities (8 videos watched and 24 procedures practiced), reflecting the residents' interest in laceration repair (50% [4/8], 54% [13/24]) and lumbar puncture (38% [3/8], 33% [8/24]). All users agreed (29% [6/21]) or strongly agreed (71% [15/21]) the cart encouraged practice and improved confidence in independently performing procedures. No changes were observed in the proportion of actual procedures completed by residents.Conclusions: A workplace procedural training cart was used mostly by pediatric interns. The cart cultivated residents' perceived confidence in real procedures but was not used by all residents or influenced residents' procedural behaviors in the pediatric emergency department.
Objectives:The current pandemic has pushed medical educators to rethink traditional learning constructs as residents are experiencing fewer patient contacts in the pediatric emergency department (PED). Especially for those bound for a career in pediatric emergency medicine (PEM), we designed a curriculum to proactively address this emerging learning gap, incorporating a wellness "check-in" at the beginning of each session. The objective of this report is to share the themes of this wellness check-ins with those engaged in pediatric emergency medicine education and mentorship. Additionally, we share our curricular approach as we plan to continue PEM Pals after the pandemic restrictions are lifted.Methods: "PEM Pals" is a twice-weekly video conference meeting made up of pediatric residents with an expressed interest in PEM and those residents currently on rotation in the pediatric emergency department. Following a flipped classroom model, participants complete a presession learning activity and then core PEM topics are covered through literature review, case discussions, and telesimulations. Each meeting begins with a wellness "check-in." Themes generated from these check-ins were member checked by our core learning contingent.Results: Nine residents make up our core learning contingent and we have had 11 "PEM Pals" sessions since March 2020. Three themes emerged from the wellness check-ins. The first was each postgraduate year's unique concern over professional transitions. The second was a pervasive sense of guilt. And the third was a grave concern about their ability to support and be supported from their personal communities. Conclusions:The goal of our curriculum was to supplement an anticipated knowledge gap. Through use of a wellness "check-in," we elicited important themes for PEM educational leaders to consider as they mentor pediatric residents toward a career in PEM during the pandemic.
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