| Literature DB >> 29974018 |
Shin Wakatsuki1, Pedro Tanaka1, Rafael Vinagre1, Adrian Marty1, Jakob Louis Demant L Thomsen2, Alex Macario1.
Abstract
Background Teaching during patient care is an important competency for faculty. Little is known about anesthesiology resident preferences for teaching by anesthesiology faculty in the operating room (OR). If the behaviors and characteristics of anesthesia teaching in the OR that are most valued by residents were identified, faculty could incorporate that best practice to teach residents during OR cases. The objective of this phenomenological study was to interview anesthesiology residents to determine what they perceive the best faculty teachers are doing in the OR to educate residents. Methods Thirty randomly selected anesthesiology residents (10 in each post-graduate year class) were interviewed using a semi-structured approach with a predetermined question: "Based on your experiences as a resident, when you think about the best-attending teachers in the OR, what are the best-attending teachers doing in the OR to teach that other faculty maybe are not doing?" Interviews were recorded, transcribed, converted into codes, and grouped into themes derived from the cognitive apprenticeship framework, which includes content, teaching methods, sequencing, and social characteristics. Results Resident responses were separated into a total of 134 answers, with similar answers grouped into one of 27 different codes. The most commonly mentioned codes were: autonomy - step back and let resident work through (mentioned by 13 residents), reasoning - explain why attending does things (12), context - teach something relevant to the case (8), commitment - take time to teach (8), literature - bring relevant papers (8), prior knowledge - assess the baseline level (7), flexibility - be open to trying different approaches (7), focus on just a few learning points (6), reflection - ask resident questions (6), provide real-time feedback (6), teach back - ask residents to explain what they were taught in their own words (5), belonging - facilitate communication with the OR team (5), psychological safety - be open and approachable (5), equanimity - stay calm and collected (5), select proper timing for instruction when the resident is not occupied with patient care (5), visualization - use graphs or diagrams (5), and specify learning goals ahead of time (5). Conclusion The best practice for OR teaching, as perceived by anesthesia residents, includes social characteristics, such as context, commitment, psychological safety, equanimity, and proper timing, as well as teaching methods, such as autonomy, reasoning, literature, prior knowledge, flexibility, reflection, real-time feedback, and teach back. Further studies can determine if training anesthesiology faculty to incorporate these elements increases the caliber of daily teaching in the OR.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesiology; graduate medical education; resident teaching
Year: 2018 PMID: 29974018 PMCID: PMC6029730 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.2563
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Cognitive Apprenticeship Framework of the Learning Environment
Codes for All Resident Responses Grouped into Teaching Strategies, Social Characteristics, or Content
ABA: American Board of Anesthesiology
| Code | Total number of times mentioned | CA-1 | CA-2 | CA-3 | |
| Teaching Strategy | Autonomy (step back & let resident work through) | 13 | 3 | 6 | 4 |
| Reasoning (explain why attending does things) | 12 | 6 | 3 | 3 | |
| Literature (bring articles relevant to the case) | 8 | 2 | 2 | 4 | |
| Flexibility (open to trying different things) | 7 | 2 | 2 | 3 | |
| Prior knowledge (assess the baseline level) | 7 | 1 | 5 | 1 | |
| Real-time feedback | 6 | 2 | 2 | 2 | |
| Reflection (ask the resident questions) | 6 | 0 | 3 | 3 | |
| Teach-back (ask residents to explain what they were taught in own words) | 5 | 0 | 1 | 4 | |
| Visualization (use graphs or diagrams) | 5 | 3 | 1 | 1 | |
| Specify learning goals (before the start of the case or the day before) | 4 | 2 | 2 | 0 | |
| Discussion (use two-way communication) | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Breaking down a complex thing | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| Practice techniques in non-pressure environment | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | |
| Multimodal teaching | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | |
| Real-time teaching | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | |
| Link teaching content to ABA exams | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | |
| Challenge out of comfort zone | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | |
| Social characteristics | Context (teach something relevant to the case) | 8 | 3 | 2 | 3 |
| Commitment (take time to teach, make effort) | 8 | 4 | 2 | 2 | |
| Psychological safety (be open and approachable to questions from resident) | 5 | 2 | 2 | 1 | |
| Equanimity (remain calm and collected) | 5 | 2 | 1 | 2 | |
| Proper timing for instruction | 5 | 3 | 1 | 1 | |
| Belonging (facilitate communication with OR team) | 5 | 1 | 2 | 2 | |
| Confident clinically | 3 | 0 | 2 | 1 | |
| Personable and open | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | |
| Ask for feedback for themselves | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
| Content | Focus on a few learning points | 6 | 3 | 1 | 2 |
| TOTAL | 134 | 45 | 46 | 43 |
Teaching Strategy Codes with Sample Verbatim Quotes to Illustrate
| Scaffolding – provide supports to encourage the performance of activities at their learning edge & gradually decrease support over time | |
| Autonomy (step back and let resident work through) |
“[The best teachers] are really good at when to take a step back and allow the resident to work through their procedure or their line of thinking as opposed to jumping in and doing what needs to get done.” |
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“They're comfortable knowing that they can rescue you and letting you, if you need to even struggle little bit, to accomplish a task. So, in that way, you can learn it better and appreciate it more. And they're not stepping in too fast to take over.” | |
| Prior knowledge (assess the baseline level) |
“The best teachers access knowledge before giving knowledge. They ask questions about the learner’s baseline understanding, and build up there and push the edge in that way.” |
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“Really trying to gauge what level I am at. Instead of just automatically teaching something better trying to see what I already know. Asking a lot of questions and trying to gauge what level of learning I'm at so that they're really teaching to the level of the learner.” | |
| Reflection (ask the resident questions) |
“Faculty come to mind who really challenge you, wonder why you pick a certain drug or a certain type of anesthetic - what your reasoning is behind it. There might be evidence you have. Some residents may not like being challenged that way. I enjoy having somebody just keep asking, ‘Why do you do this?’” |
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“The best teachers set me up with a problem. They say, 'OK. What if this happens right now, what are you going to do and why? What's your differential?' That way, it keeps you involved in the current case and also makes you think about things you end up learning.” | |
| Modeling – let learner observe you perform the activity, think out loud explicitly demonstrate both physical act & thinking | |
| Reasoning (explain why attending does things ) |
“[The best teachers] explain what they do because everyone has a different style and how they do it. They provide a reason of why they do what they do. I understand there's a lot in anesthesia that hasn't been clarified completely regarding evidence based medicine . . . To develop one’s style and one's proper and good anesthetic care, it's nice to know their reasons. This way you can agree with those reasons and then talk about that technique. Or you can say I would like to adopt this technique but only when those reasoning apply to my patient.” |
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“What I learn the most from the attendings is when I take these little things. This is why I put OG tube like this, this is why [I put the] temperature probe like this, this is why I bag-mask like this.” | |
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“The best teachers, they clearly have a strong understanding of physiology and a way to explain it. The best is when you get logical explanation that's backed up by science for why they're teaching you something. That's how I want to practice. That's what I want, how I want to decide what I want to do. Like it's good to see different preferences just based off of experience but I like to have reasoning backed up by science as to why I'm doing the things I'm doing.” | |
| Specify learning goals (before start of case or day before) |
“I prefer when they tell me the outline, for example, ‘We’re going to talk about three items today. Here is No. 1, No. 2, and No. 3. Let’s start No. 1.” |
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“I would say, like, taking an element of the case, an equipment, a medication, or overall principle of anesthesia and, ‘This is what we are going to learn about today.’ So having purpose and a precise learning object is helpful.” | |
| Breaking down a complex thing |
“They explain things in such a way that they are not explaining to an equal level attending colleague but to someone who might be doing it for the first time. Even if it’s simple, . . . breaking it down and taking you through each step.” |
| Coaching – observe learner perform the activity and provide directed feedback and guidance | |
| Literature (bring papers relevant to the case) |
“Bring papers and resources to discuss and review in the OR . . . [An attending] discussed how the study affects the way he manages all patients and especially our current patient. This is helpful because it provides concrete and specific evidence as well as discussion that makes me more likely to agree with and adopt the technique in the future.” |
| Real-time feedback |
“Immediate feedback helps you change things . . . if your technique with intubation is like, 'It could be better this way. This is how you did it. This is how you should do it.' And you could practice on the next case. So it’s something you can fix real-time, I think that’s better than waiting around and being vague about it." |
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“The thing that I like the most is someone who just teaches as you go along rather than like waiting to the end of the day or waiting till your evaluation months a later to tell about things that were done well and things that could be done better. I think it's just best to do it in real time especially since anesthesia is so hands-on . . . because I want to be able to improve now rather than waiting like a couple months” | |
| Visualization (use graphs or diagrams) |
“I like the people who do diagrams . . . they'll grab a piece of paper . . . break it down with diagrams and flowcharts . . . you trained to learn rather than just hearing it but also seeing their words or seeing the principles written down.” |
| Discussion (two-way communication) |
“I prefer . . . teaching and application better than just being talked to. I’d like to do a discussion.” |
| Exploration – invite learners to identify and undertake new learning activities or pose and solve their own questions to promote independent learning | |
| Flexibility (open to trying different things) |
“Be flexible with the anesthesia plan. Let’s say the resident is suggesting one particular thing and the attending wants to alter it a little bit. I think that’s fine. But if they are too specific about doing it their way, this resident may not be able to experience and see what the plan goes . . . if the other plan is not too much different from the plan that the residents suggest, perhaps the attending can be flexible and let residents do their plan. And, for better or worse, they’ll see the result of their plan and then form their own learning.” |
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“The best teachers are actually very open minded. With some attendings, I like to try new things and push the limits. Other attendings are just like they only do one way and they only know how to do it one way and they can't deviate from that. So you have to do it their way and that makes it harder for me to learn. But I want to be able to try new things. And if they're too close minded to new techniques then I don't learn from them very well.” | |
| Practice techniques in non-pressure environment |
“Teaching on different ways to approach a difficult airway or using advanced airway devices on patients who may not be difficult electively. I think those are some of the things that we don't really do until we're in an extreme situation. So we hopefully are going to practice in a non-pressured environment.” |
| Articulation – ask learners to talk through activity, explain their thinking, and or describe their rationale for approach or decision | |
| Teach back (ask residents to explain what they were taught) |
“[An attending] taught me about something and then said, 'OK. Now you teach me what I just taught you.' And I think . . . [I could] retell what I just learned . . . and if you don't do well for some, he’ll teach it again and then he'll ask you to teach it to him again. I think that is a really effective method of learning.” |
Figure 2The Teaching Strategies Most Commonly Mentioned by Residents About the Best Faculty Educators
Social Characteristics of OR Teaching with Verbatim Quotes
OR: operating room
| Code | Verbatim quote example |
| Context (teach something relevant to the case) |
“The first thing that is very helpful is something contextually relevant . . . [When] something is happening in the OR, or there is some part of the anesthetic technique that we are doing, a medication we are using, or an airway device we are using then the best teachers use that as a springboard to teach something.” |
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“Focusing the teaching on obviously what's relevant to the case and what we're doing that day . . . every day we do something different but when it's relevant to the case and relevant to the patient that we're taking care of, then it also helps me as a learner to remember things more and when I think about this issue. I can use this piece of knowledge when I take care of a similar patient with a similar case in the future.” | |
| Commitment (take time to teach, make an effort) |
“A really good teacher actually bothers to take the time to teach in the OR at times that are appropriate for patient care.” |
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“It's really nice when attendings can take some time during the OR to do some explicit teaching. Have some time with the attendings as opposed to having an attending be there and help us get through the critical moment of the case, but then not be there for the other parts . . . because I think there are some like great teaching opportunities during rest of case.” | |
| Psychological safety (be open and approachable to questions from resident) |
“[The best teachers] would be peer available for question. Because sometimes I have questions but if they seem so busy, I will be reluctant to approach them and ask questions.” |
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“A good teacher is willing to have that discussion and understand that, not just because questions are being asked it doesn't necessarily mean that I'm questioning their competency. I'm just questioning to better understand the topic.” | |
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“To have open communication and interaction, is important to be responsive to the teaching, sort of it. If you have kind of wall, it’s a little hard to engage, or to ask question, or set expectations.” | |
| Equanimity (calm and collected) |
“The ones that are able to stay calm and collected when things aren't going smoothly or where there is an emergency or something. I've been in a couple rooms where the attendings lost their temper or they've panicked. And it makes a horrendous learning experience.” |
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“I find that it's much more effective to be learning while doing when a teacher is calm under pressure. Attendings who are able to stay calm and help us think through the process during induction or emergence, for example, particularly during crises in the OR, they are just better at communication, more effective learning for us than somebody who gets frustrated.” | |
| Proper timing for instruction |
“I learn best when I'm not preoccupied by something. So if the patient is unstable or it's the beginning or the end of the case, those are all things that are preoccupying me. So finding a down time in the middle of the case is preferential.” |
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“Unfortunately, sometimes the teaching will occur while you're intervening or doing other things. And so, it can be a little distracting and I'm unable to focus entirely on the care of the patient whereas really good teachers are able to come back in after the patient settled and then take a few minutes to teach.” | |
| Belonging (facilitate communication with OR team) |
“It’s someone who communicates well . . . it would be with us as residents but also with all the colleagues, the surgeons in the room, and the nursing staff. Because that creates a better and more comfortable environment to work in.” |
| Confident clinically |
“The best ones are clinically confident themselves. Meaning they are comfortable, they don’t freak out over little things and you can just sense they are confident in their ability to adapt to different situations.” |
| Personable and open |
“Just being personable, open and friendly . . . If you feel like you're not really connecting with your attending, it can be an uncomfortable experience. Better when you are working on a team with somebody who supports you and who has your best interests at heart and is going to be there to help when you need them.” |
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“I think really good teachers because we're always one on one in the OR usually get to know me personally. So spending just a few minutes to know more about who I am and what my interests are then I feel like I'm more engaged in what they have to offer.” | |
| Ask for feedback for themselves |
“The good teachers often seek feedback for improvement, assessing how the day went, what things they can do to improve the experience for the resident, too.” |
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“I think when the attendings are open to feedback themselves, too, it makes them more approachable for us as residents and it makes us more open to learning from them. I've had attendings ask me, ‘What can I do better? How do you learn best?’ When they open up that dialogue, I think it makes it more comfortable for the residents.” |
Verbatim Quote Examples of Focus on a Few Learning Points
| Code | Verbatim quote examples |
| Focus on a few learning points |
“Having the attending focus on only a couple of things during anesthetic care. If they're continually giving advice on every small aspect of your care, it can be overwhelming. You can actually start to perform under what you'd normally perform as well as get sidetracked off of taking care of the patient's primary. Focus on one or two things per case.” |
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“I'd rather focus on two or three learning points for the day and not just overwhelm you with all the nitty-gritty.” |