Characterizing the asymptomatic spread of SARS-CoV-2 is important for understanding the COVID-19 pandemic. This study was aimed at determining asymptomatic spread of SARS-CoV-2 in a suburban, Southern U.S. population during a period of state restrictions and physical distancing mandates. This is one of the first published seroprevalence studies from North Carolina and included multicenter, primary care, and emergency care facilities serving a low-density, suburban and rural population since description of the North Carolina state index case introducing the SARS-CoV-2 respiratory pathogen to this population. To estimate point seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 among asymptomatic individuals over time, two cohort studies were examined. The first cohort study, named ScreenNC, was comprised of outpatient clinics, and the second cohort study, named ScreenNC2, was comprised of inpatients unrelated to COVID-19. Asymptomatic infection by SARS-CoV-2 (with no clinical symptoms) was examined using an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA)-approved antibody test (Abbott) for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 IgG. This assay as performed under CLIA had a reported specificity/sensitivity of 100%/99.6%. ScreenNC identified 24 out of 2,973 (0.8%) positive individuals among asymptomatic participants accessing health care during 28 April to 19 June 2020, which was increasing over time. A separate cohort, ScreenNC2, sampled from 3 March to 4 June 2020, identified 10 out of 1,449 (0.7%) positive participants. IMPORTANCE This study suggests limited but accelerating asymptomatic spread of SARS-CoV-2. Asymptomatic infections, like symptomatic infections, disproportionately affected vulnerable communities in this population, and seroprevalence was higher in African American participants than in White participants. The low, overall prevalence may reflect the success of shelter-in-place mandates at the time this study was performed and of maintaining effective physical distancing practices among suburban populations. Under these public health measures and aggressive case finding, outbreak clusters did not spread into the general population.
The MYMOP instrument appears to be the most useful of the four measures used to evaluate clinical outcomes associated with a course of acupuncture treatments (SF-36, MYMOP, global clinical change, and patient satisfaction). This easy-to-administer instrument appears to be sensitive to clinical change over a 2-month period among patients who sought acupuncture for a wide variety of clinical conditions.
ompared to individuals living in urban locations, those in rural areas experience worse health outcomes. 1,2 A key contributor to rural-urban disparities is the geographic maldistribution of physicians. With fewer health care professionals available, clinical practice in rural communities demands physicians with skills to care for patients with a wide range of complex health needs. 3 While many factors affect the supply and distribution of physicians, graduate medical education (GME) funding is a major determining factor. [4][5][6] According to the Congressional Research Service, ''the size of the federal investment in GMEestimated at $16 billion in 2015-makes it a policy lever often considered to alter the health care workforce and impact health care access.'' 7 Unfortunately, the current distribution of GME funds do not align with rural workforce needs. Estimates suggest that almost all (99%) of Medicare spending for GME training goes to programs in urban areas. 5 Studies have also shown that physicians often practice within 100 miles of where they completed residency and that training residents where they are needed in practice is one promising strategy to increase the supply of rural physicians. 5,8,9 Recognizing the rural health crisis and the role that GME investments play in building workforce capacity, Congress appropriated funding for a new Rural Residency Planning and Development Program (RRPD) under the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). 2,7 In 2019 and 2020, HRSA awarded approximately $28 million in grants to 38 organizations across 25 states to start rural residency programs in needed specialties, including family medicine, general internal medicine, and general psychiatry. 10,11 Despite these investments, rural communities still face significant barriers in developing and sustaining residency programs. This article identifies these barriers and proposes potential solutions. These solutions require action by multiple stakeholderssome are regulatory fixes, while others require Congressional action. Given the complexity of GME organization and financing, we have included definitions of key concepts and terminology used in this article in the online supplementary data. 4,[12][13][14][15][16][17]
Background and Objectives: The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Common Residency Program Requirements stipulate that each faculty member’s performance be evaluated annually. Feedback is essential to this process, yet the culture of medicine poses challenges to developing effective feedback systems. The current study explores existing and ideal characteristics of faculty teaching evaluation systems from the perspectives of key stakeholders: faculty, residents, and residency program directors (PDs). Methods: We utilized two qualitative approaches: (1) confidential semistructured telephone interviews with PDs from a convenience sample of eight family medicine residency programs, (2) qualitative responses from an anonymous online survey of faculty and residents in the same eight programs. We used inductive thematic analysis to analyze the interviews and survey responses. Data collection occurred in the fall of 2017. Results: All eight (100%) of the PDs completed interviews. Survey response rates for faculty and residents were 79% (99/126) and 70% (152/216), respectively. Both PD and faculty responses identified a desire for actionable, real-time, frequent feedback used to foster continued professional development. Themes unique to faculty included easy accessibility and feedback from peers. Residents expressed an interest in in-person feedback and a process minimizing potential retribution. Residents indicated that feedback should be based on shared understanding of what skill(s) the faculty member is trying to address. Conclusions: PDs, faculty, and residents share a desire to provide faculty with meaningful, specific, and real-time feedback. Programs should strive to provide a culture in which feedback is an integral part of the learning process for both residents and faculty.
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