Introduction References Objectives Conclusions Results Faculty provision of performance feedback is critical for residents to improve their clinical skills.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Connie N. Hess, MD, Bimal R. Shah, MD, MBA, S. Andrew Peng, MS, Laine Thomas, PhD, Matthew T. Roe, MD, MHS, Eric D. Peterson, MD, MPH Relationship of Early.
Advertisements

Improving ED Bedside Teaching & Resident Evaluation Stanford EM Faculty Development May 21 st, 2003.
The ERAS Application Can Predict ACGME Competency-Based Surgical Resident Performance Amy M. Tolan MD *, Amy H. Kaji MD PhD *, Chi Quach †, O.Joe Hines.
Joan E. St. Onge, M.D. UMMSM At Holy Cross Hospital Internal Medicine Residency Faculty Development January 23, 2013 The Evaluation Toolkit.
The use of simulation to teach medical students how to recognise and manage a sick child – A cluster randomised trial Results 61 students participated.
Charles Holden, MD- Associate Program Director Thomas Hartranft, MD – Program Director Darrell Spurlock, Jr. PhD – Director of Research Mount Carmel Health.
® Introduction Mental Health Predictors of Pain and Function in Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain Olivia D. Lara, K. Ashok Kumar MD FRCS Sandra Burge,
Background Information : Projected prevalence of arthritis is expected to increase from 2.9 million to 6.5 million Canadians, a rise of 124% (Badley.
THE OSCE COMPARED TO THE PACKRAT AS A PREDICTOR OF PERFORMANCE ON THE PANCE Barbara Oberle, PA-S and Richard Muma, PhD, MPH, PA-C Department of Physician.
Template provided by: “posters4research.com” Introduction and relevance Research problem and purpose Research methodology Statistical analysis-Validity.
The authors would like to acknowledge the nursing staff that participated at all three locations. Without their support, many things would not be possible.
Seth D. Goldstein, MD 1, Brenessa Lindeman, MD 1, Jorie Colbert-Getz, PhD 3, Trisha Arbella 1, Robert Dudas, MD 2, Anne Lidor, MD, MPH 1, Bethany Sacks,
L o g o Safety climate and motivation toward patient safety among Japanese nurses in hospitals of fewer than 250 beds Industrial Health 47 (2009), 70–79.
Journal Club/September 24, Swing et al. Television and video game exposure and the development of attention problems. Pediatrics 2010;126:
Boarding Times and Patient Safety: A quantifiable and generalizable model David Wein, MD MBA Associate Facility Medical Director Tampa General Hospital.
Functional Impairment and Depressive Symptoms: Mitigating Effects of Trait Hope Jameson K. Hirsch, Ph.D. 1,2, S. Kaye, B.S. 1, & Jeffrey M. Lyness, M.D.
Assessment of Emergency Medicine Residents’ Bedside Communication Skills: A Survey of Emergency Department Patients Amanda Keller York College of PA Biology.
Meaningful Evaluation: Framework, Process, Impact Inis Jane Bardella, M.D., FAAFP Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Global Health Initiatives.
Disclosure of Financial Conflicts of Interest in Continuing Medical Education Michael D. Jibson, MD, PhD and Jennifer Seibert, MD University of Michigan.
Disability Levels and Correlates among Older Mobile Home Dwellers, an NHATS analysis Tala M. Al-Rousan, Linda M. Rubenstein, Robert B. Wallace College.
Proficiency of surgical faculty and residents with ethical dilemmas: Is modeling enough? Kamela K. Scott, PhD David J. Chesire, PhD J. Bracken Burns, Jr,
METHODS Setting Wichita State University Physician Assistant Program Study population WSU PA graduating class of 2003 and 2004 (n=84) Study design Retrospective.
Observed Ward Behavior Strongly Associated with Real World Living Skills: An Analysis of Concurrent Validity between NOSIE and ILSI Charlie A. Davidson,
A Survey of Selection Criteria in General Surgery Residency Programs George Makdisi MD 1 Tetsuya Takeuchi MD 2 James Rucinski MD 2 Leslie Wise MD 2 1 Department.
Self-assessment Accuracy: the influence of gender and year in medical school self assessment Elhadi H. Aburawi, Sami Shaban, Margaret El Zubeir, Khalifa.
Does the Principals’ Model of Supervision Improve Instruction in the Classroom? Jill Karp Juli Mulcahy Dowling College.
AN INNOVATIVE & INTEGRATED TESTING FORMAT COMBINING ANATOMY, PRIMARY CARE SKILLS, AND OMM IN A SIMULATED PATIENT ENCOUNTER Gail Dudley, DO, Francine Anderson,
The ‘July Phenomenon’ in Obstetrics Rini Banerjee Ratan, MD Assistant Clinical Professor September 10, 2008.
Types of Statistics DescriptiveInferential Means Medians Modes Percentages Variation Distributions Draws conclusions Assigns confidence to conclusions.
1 The Effect of Primary Health Care Orientation on Chronic Illness Care Management Julie Schmittdiel, Ph.D., Stephen M. Shortell, Ph.D., Thomas Rundall,
Dr Sam Ley CT2 ICM Dr Radha Sundaram Consultant ICM Royal Alexandra Hospital, Paisley, Scotland.
Trimming the Fat: Optimizing Overall Educational Value by Defining Factors Associated with Overall Educational Value and Service to Education Ratio Caroline.
Copyright © 2014 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Unauthorized commercial reproduction of this slide is prohibited Supplemental PowerPoint Slides Patients’
FAIMER Program Evaluation 3: How is it used? Evaluation as Research Stewart Mennin Bill Burdick.
Optimization of psychotropic drug prescription in nursing home patients with dementia: the PROPER study (PRescription Optimization of Psychotropic drugs.
Program Evaluation Principles and Applications PAS 2010.
Copyright restrictions may apply JAMA Ophthalmology Journal Club Slides: Awareness and Knowledge of Emergent Ophthalmic Disease Uhr JH, Mishra K, Wei C,
Data Analysis: Statistics for Item Interactions. Purpose To provide a broad overview of statistical analyses appropriate for exploring interactions and.
TEMPLATE AND PRINTING BY: GRMERC Consortium Members: Grand Valley State University, Michigan State University, Saint Mary’s.
Introduction Results Curricular Design Patient Safety Leadership WalkRounds™ were first introduced at Partners Healthcare in Engage frontline staff.
Assessing Specialty Specific Milestones of ‘Off-Service’ Rotators During Emergency Medicine Rotation Lauren Walter, MD, FACEP, FAAEM and Andrew Edwards,
Abstract References Methods Introduction Results Conclusions Figures/Graphs Click headings to further view content Click Here to insert brief content.
A New Model for Assessing Teaching Quality Improvement to Family Medicine Residents Does It Work? Fred Tudiver, Ivy Click, Jeri Ann Basden Department of.
OBJECTIVE INTRODUCTION Emergency Medicine Milestones: Longitudinal Interrater Agreement EM milestones were developed by EM experts for the Accreditation.
Incorporation of Images on Presentation Slides Positively Impacts Continuing Medical Education Conference Speaker Evaluations Ian Ferguson, BA 1, Andrew.
Competency and Credentialing John Andazola, MD William Ellert, MD Phoenix, Arizona.
Title Introduction Methods Results Discussion Authors
Mapping Access: Evaluating Access to Emergency Care Using Geospatial Analysis & Population Characteristics Erin Simon DO, FACEP Emergency Medicine Research.
LESSONS LEARNED FROM A PILOT NUTRITION ELECTIVE AT AN OSTEOPATHIC MEDICAL SCHOOL an MSEDI project Audra Lehman MD, Glenn Davis MS - Touro University California,
The Association between Prehospital Time Intervals and ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction System Performance.
Early Diagnosis of ASD In a Community Sample: Who Refers and Why?
How Patients Discuss Their Risk: Words and Numbers
Lisa Weiss, M.D. Brian F. Pendleton, Ph.D. Susan Labuda Schrop, M.S.
William Lovett, MD, Ashley Secunda, DO
Introduction Results Hypotheses Discussion Method
CHAPTER fourteen Correlation and Regression Analysis
The Association between External Ear Size and Medical Student Performance: A Purely Hypothetical Study John Star Student, B.S. and Jane Doe Mentor, M.D.,
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU Material & Methods (Click)
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
Using an ‘Oral Board’ exam to assess for EPA 10 in
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
Gender Bias in Nursing Assessments of Emergency Medicine Residents
Christopher S. Kiefer MD, Erica B. Shaver MD,
“Hawks vs Dove” Phenomenon in Faculty Attending Evaluations of
Gerald H. Sterling, Ph.D. Senior Associate Dean, Education
Conclusions/ Future Directions
RMU RESIDENCY PROGRAMS
Presentation transcript:

Introduction References Objectives Conclusions Results Faculty provision of performance feedback is critical for residents to improve their clinical skills The faculty-resident relationship is one of the most important factors influencing feedback behavior Fear regarding potential damage of the faculty-resident relationship is a frequently cited obstacle to delivery of corrective feedback No previous studies have examined the extent to which feedback behavior influences resident rating of faculty Relationship Between Feedback Delivery & Faculty Rank 948 evaluations for AY Significant correlation between feedback behavior and faculty rating (r=0.52, p<0.05) No independent association in multivariable model To determine whether, and to what extent, faculty feedback behavior is associated with resident rating of faculty Faculty should provide context-specific, critical performance feedback to residents without fearing its effect on their overall resident ratings. 1,2 Aleksandr M. Tichter, MD MS, 1,2 Osman R. Sayan, MD, 1,2,3 Wallace A. Carter, MD 1 Emergency Medicine Residency, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY 2 Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons 3 Weill Cornell Medical College Methods Design: Retrospective, cross-sectional Population: Emergency Medicine core faculty Primary outcome: Faculty rating, compared with peers (Likert scale 0-5) Main Predictor: Faculty feedback behavior (Likert scale 0-4) Co-variates:Faculty demographics, evaluation on medical knowledge, patient care, professionalism, interpersonal skills, and clinical teaching Analysis: Descriptive statistics to summarize demographics Pearson correlation to determine association between feedback delivery behavior and resident rating of faculty Multivariable linear regression to measure association while adjusting for covariates Ende J. Feedback in clinical medical education. JAMA. 1983;250(6): Kogan JR et al. Faculty staff perceptions of feedback to residents after direct observation of clinical skills. Medical Education. 2012;46(2): Cantillon P et al. Giving feedback in clinical settings. BMJ, 2008;335:a1961. (Figure 1) (Table 1) (Table 2)

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FEEDBACK DELIVERY & FACULTY RANK 1,2 Aleksandr M. Tichter, MD MS, 1,2 Osman R. Sayan, MD, 1,2,3 Wallace A. Carter, MD 1 Emergency Medicine Residency, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY 2 Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons 3 Weill Cornell Medical College Figure 1: Resident Evaluation of Faculty

1,2 Aleksandr M. Tichter, MD MS, 1,2 Osman R. Sayan, MD, 1,2,3 Wallace A. Carter, MD 1 Emergency Medicine Residency, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY 2 Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons 3 Weill Cornell Medical College Table 2: Linear regression model for faculty rating RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FEEDBACK DELIVERY & FACULTY RANK Table 1: Demographic characteristics and evaluation scores for EM faculty * p<0.05