Teaching and assessing resident competence in practice-based learning and improvement

Greg Ogrinc, Linda A Headrick, Laura J Morrison, Tina Foster, Greg Ogrinc, Linda A Headrick, Laura J Morrison, Tina Foster

Abstract

We designed, implemented, and evaluated a 4-week practice-based learning and improvement (PBLI) elective. Eleven internal medicine residents from 2 separate residency programs participated in the PBLI elective and 22 other residents comprised a comparison group. Residents in each group had similar pretest Quality Improvement Knowledge Application Tool scores; but after the PBLI elective, participant scores were significantly higher. Also, participants' self-assessed ratings of PBLI skills increased after the rotation and remained elevated 6 months afterward. In this curriculum, residents completed a project to improve patient care and demonstrated their knowledge on an evaluation tool in a way that was superior to nonparticipants.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Comparison of participants’ pre-, post-, and 6-month self-assessment scores. 1 = not confident to 4 = very confident.

Source: PubMed

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