#KeyLIMEPodcast 117: When is a Resident Ready For Unsupervised Practice?

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(Post)graduate medical education is evolving.  Duh!  Our current “ballistic” model is being replaced by a staged progression of independence.  Huh?  In other words: the current model (ballistic) restricts the autonomy of a resident, requiring close supervision right to the edge of residency.  Than, typically without warning, we launch the resident into unsupervised practice assuming that written exam scores are sufficient proxies for competence as an attending physician.  We hope that we launch them high enough (and for the vast majority we do) so that they can figure things out before they crash back to earth.

This week, the Key Literature in Medical Education Podcast tackles an alternative curriculum design – staged progression of ability (and autonomy).

Marie-Louis Stokes from the Royal Australian College of Physicians joins Anthony Llewellyn and Jason to discuss how the development of expertise occurs in pediatricians.

(Let’s all hope the Jason doesn’t adopt an embarrassing fake Aussi accent … )

-Jonathan

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KeyLIME Session 117 – Article under review:

Listen to the podcast

Download the abstract: keylime-episode-117

New KeyLIME Podcast Episode Image

Li ST, Tancredi DJ, Schwartz A, Guillot AP, Burke AE, Trimm RF, Guralnick S, Mahan JD, Gifford KA; Association of Pediatric Program Directors (APPD) Longitudinal Educational Assessment Research Network (LEARN) Validity of Resident Self-Assessment Group. Competent for Unsupervised Practice: Use of Pediatric Residency Training Milestones to Assess Readiness.  Academic Medicine. 2016 Jul 26. [Epub ahead of print]

Reviewer: Marie-Louise Stokes (@marie_stokes)

Background

Since 1 July 2013, the ACGME in the US requires evaluation of trainees (residents) using Educational Milestones (observable developmental levels of behaviour) mapped to their 6 competency domains:

  • Patient Care
  • Medical Knowledge
  • Interpersonal and communication skills
  • Practice based learning and improvement
  • Professionalism
  • Systems Based Practice

The milestones are organized across 5 levels from beginner to expert–

The Pediatric group has defined their milestones using the Dreyfus model of expertise development

Level 1 – novice (early medical student)

Level 2 – advanced beginner

Level 3  -competent

Level 4 – proficient

Level 5 – master (seasoned expert practitioner)

The ACGME set a target (not a requirement) for achievement at graduation at level 4

Pediatric group developed milestone descriptors for their 21 subcompetencies that sit across the 6 domains.

The Pediatric Group have not yet defined their explicit benchmarks for assessment; they wanted to use empirical evidence as the basis for setting milestone achievements for pediatric trainees across pediatric programs.

Purpose

To describe clinical skills progression during pediatric residency by analyzing the distribution of milestone assessments by subcompetency and year of training (PGY1, PGY2 and PGY3) to determine reasonable m\milestone expectations at time of graduation.

Type of Paper

Research: Cohort study (prospective; multi-institutional)

Key Points on Methods

Multi-institutional prospective cohort study

47 of the 199 US (24%) paediatric programs participated covering 2030 paediatric residents. Participating and non-participating programs and residents were comparable on a range of demographic variables.

Descriptive statistics –for  subcompetency milestone ratings by year of training.

Key Outcomes

Fewer than 21% of residents achieved a 4 (proficient) or higher in all 21 subcompetencies

Most residents (79%) achieved a 3 (competent) or higher in all 21 sub-competencies.

Overall the study group of residents combined (using mean as the measure) progressed in their milestone ratings across the 3 years of training.

Found that variation in milestone rating was greater in PGY1 than PGY3.

There appears to be less grade inflation using milestones than the traditional 5 point Likert scale.

Key Conclusions

 The authors conclude…

  • Trainees enter training with a wide range of skills but as they advanced skill variability decreased
  • Most graduating pediatric residents were still advancing on the milestone continuum towards proficiency and mastery and
  • An expectation of level 4 or above in all categories is unrealistic
  • An expectation of level 3 or more is more realistic
  • Milestone data can be used to identify key areas that should be specifically targeted during training.

Spare Keys – other take home points for clinician educator

The importance of using empirical evidence /data to guide and validate important policy decisions like what the required levels of achievement for graduating trainees.

The great opportunity to use these types of data to enable trainees and programs to benchmark themselves against peers and identify areas of strength and areas for improvements.

Shout out

Commend the LEARN group for doing the study.

Access KeyLIME podcast archives here

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