Literature DB >> 24398734

Improving faculty feedback to resident trainees during a simulated case: a randomized, controlled trial of an educational intervention.

Rebecca D Minehart1, Jenny Rudolph, May C M Pian-Smith, Daniel B Raemer.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although feedback conversations are an essential component of learning, three challenges make them difficult: the fear that direct task feedback will harm the relationship with the learner, overcoming faculty cognitive biases that interfere with their eliciting the frames that drive trainees' performances, and time pressure. Decades of research on developmental conversations suggest solutions to these challenges: hold generous inferences about learners, subject one's own thinking to test by making it public, and inquire directly about learners' cognitive frames.
METHODS: The authors conducted a randomized, controlled trial to determine whether a 1-h educational intervention for anesthesia faculty improved feedback quality in a simulated case. The primary outcome was an analysis of the feedback conversation between faculty and a simulated resident (actor) by using averages of six elements of a Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale and an objective structured assessment of feedback. Seventy-one Harvard faculty anesthesiologists from five academic hospitals participated.
RESULTS: The intervention group scored higher when averaging all ratings. Scores for individual elements showed that the intervention group performed better in maintaining a psychologically safe environment (4.3 ± 1.21 vs. 3.8 ± 1.16; P = 0.001), identifying and exploring performance gaps (4.1 ± 1.38 vs. 3.7 ± 1.34; P = 0.048), and they more frequently emphasized the professionalism error of failing to call for help over the clinical topic of anaphylaxis (66 vs. 41%; P = 0.008).
CONCLUSIONS: Quality of faculty feedback to a simulated resident was improved in the interventional group in a number of areas after a 1-h educational intervention, and this short intervention allowed a group of faculty to overcome enough discomfort in addressing a professionalism lapse to discuss it directly.

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24398734     DOI: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000000058

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  9 in total

1.  Residency Program Factors Associated With Depressive Symptoms in Internal Medicine Interns: A Prospective Cohort Study.

Authors:  Karina Pereira-Lima; Rahael R Gupta; Constance Guille; Srijan Sen
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2019-06       Impact factor: 6.893

Review 2.  Training in Endoscopy.

Authors:  Keith Siau; Neil D Hawkes; Paul Dunckley
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Gastroenterol       Date:  2018-09

3.  Faculty Underestimate Resident Desire for Constructive Feedback and Overestimate Retaliation.

Authors:  Jed Wolpaw; Daniel Saddawi-Konefka; Priyanka Dwivedi; Serkan Toy
Journal:  J Educ Perioper Med       Date:  2019-10-01

4.  Guidelines: the do's, don'ts and don't knows of feedback for clinical education.

Authors:  Janet Lefroy; Chris Watling; Pim W Teunissen; Paul Brand
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2015-12

5.  In Pursuit of the Most Effective Method of Teaching Feedback Skills to Emergency Medicine Residents in Qatar: A Mixed Design.

Authors:  Khalid Bashir; Amr Elmoheen; Mohammed Seif; Shahzad Anjum; Saleem Farook; Stephen Thomas
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2020-05-16

6.  Feedback on feedback: a two-way street between residents and preceptors.

Authors:  Jane Griffiths; Karen Schultz; Han Han; Nancy Dalgarno
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2021-02-26

7.  Communication as a High-Stakes Clinical Skill: "Just-in-Time" Simulation and Vicarious Observational Learning to Promote Patient- and Family-Centered Care and to Improve Trainee Skill.

Authors:  Laura K Rock
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 7.840

8.  Characteristics, satisfiers, development needs, and barriers to success for early-career academic hospitalists.

Authors:  Shradha A Kulkarni; Margaret C Fang; Jeffrey J Glasheen; Vikas Parekh; Bradley A Sharpe
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2022-04-13       Impact factor: 2.463

9.  Feedback in Medical Education: A Critical Appraisal.

Authors:  Joshua G Kornegay; Aaron Kraut; David Manthey; Rodney Omron; Holly Caretta-Weyer; Gloria Kuhn; Sandra Martin; Lalena M Yarris
Journal:  AEM Educ Train       Date:  2017-03-22
  9 in total

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