Sharon E Mace1, Jatin Shah. 1. Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Department of Emergency Medicine, Ohio State University, 44195, USA. maces@ccf.org
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate observation unit (OU) prevalence, emergency medicine (EM) resident exposure in observation medicine (OM), EM faculty/residency director (RD) OM training, and RD attitudes toward OM. METHODS: Information was obtained from residency programs by telephone during a four-month period. RESULTS: Survey respondents indicated that 36.1% have OUs and 44.9% plan to have an OU. Observation medicine resources include textbooks 32.0%, articles 45.9%, lectures 36.9%, fellowships 2.5%, and research 26.2%. Observation medicine patient care occurs: 1) during residency: 25.4% of RDs, 11.3% of entire faculty; 2) as an attending: 45.1% of RDs. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly two-thirds of EM programs have or are planning an OU. Resources are lagging behind. This survey describes current OM education strategies to teach OM.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate observation unit (OU) prevalence, emergency medicine (EM) resident exposure in observation medicine (OM), EM faculty/residency director (RD) OM training, and RD attitudes toward OM. METHODS: Information was obtained from residency programs by telephone during a four-month period. RESULTS: Survey respondents indicated that 36.1% have OUs and 44.9% plan to have an OU. Observation medicine resources include textbooks 32.0%, articles 45.9%, lectures 36.9%, fellowships 2.5%, and research 26.2%. Observation medicine patient care occurs: 1) during residency: 25.4% of RDs, 11.3% of entire faculty; 2) as an attending: 45.1% of RDs. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly two-thirds of EM programs have or are planning an OU. Resources are lagging behind. This survey describes current OM education strategies to teach OM.
Authors: Latha G Stead; M Fernanda Bellolio; Smitha Suravaram; Robert D Brown; Anjali Bhagra; Rachel M Gilmore; Eric T Boie; Wyatt W Decker Journal: Neurocrit Care Date: 2008-10-11 Impact factor: 3.210