| Literature DB >> 31410321 |
Lara Zisblatt1, Fei Chen2, Dawn Dillman3, Amy N DiLorenzo4, Mark P MacEachern5, Amy Miller Juve3, Emily E Peoples1, Ashley E Grantham6.
Abstract
Background Critical appraisals provide a method for establishing the status of an area of study or evaluating the effectiveness of literature within it. The purpose of this study was to review and appraise studies published in 2017 on medical education in anesthesiology and to provide summaries of the highest-quality medical education research articles in the field. Methods Three Ovid MEDLINE databases, Embase.com, Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), and PsycINFO, were searched followed by a manual review of articles published in the highest impact factor journals in both the fields of anesthesiology and medical education. Abstracts were double-screened and quantitative articles subsequently scored by three randomly assigned raters. Qualitative studies were scored by two raters. Two different rubrics were used for scoring quantitative and qualitative studies, both allowed for scores ranging from 1-25. Results A total of 864 unique citations were identified through the search criteria. Of those, 62 articles met the inclusion criteria, with 59 quantitative and three qualitative. The top 10 papers with the highest scores were reported and summarized. Discussion As the first article to critically review the literature available for education in anesthesiology, we hope that this study will serve as the first manuscript in an annual series that will help individuals involved in anesthesiology education gain an understanding of the highest-quality research in the field. Once this process is repeated, trends can be tracked and serve as a resource to educators and researchers in anesthesiology for years to come.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesiology; bibliometric; medical education
Year: 2019 PMID: 31410321 PMCID: PMC6684110 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.4838
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Database Search Used in Ovid MEDLINE
| 1 | (exp anesthesiology/ or exp anesthetists/ or (anesthe* or anaesthe*).tw.) and (exp education/ or education.sh. or (academic* or class or classes or course* or curricul* or educat* or fellow or fellows or fellowship or instruct* or intern or interns or internship or learn or learner or learning or resident or residents or residenc* or school* or student* or teach* or train* or workshop*).ti.) and english.la. not (exp animals/ not humans/) |
| 2 | limit 1 to yr="2017" |
Quantitative Scoring Rubric
| Domain | Item | Item score | Max score 25 |
| Introduction (select all that apply) | 3 | ||
| Appropriate description of background literature | 1 | ||
| Clearly frame the problem | 1 | ||
| Clear objective/hypothesis | 1 | ||
| Measurement 1. Methodology (select one) | 2 | ||
| Has no pre-test or post-test | 1 | ||
| Has a post-test only (If has a pre-test do NOT select) | 1 | ||
| has a pre-test and a post-test | 2 | ||
| 2. Groups (select all that apply) | 2 | ||
| Both experimental and control group | 1 | ||
| Random assignment to groups | 1 | ||
| Data Collection 1. Institutions (select one) Number of institutions refers to origin of study participants (not study authors) | 2 | ||
| 1 institution | 0 | ||
| 2 institutions | 1 | ||
| 3 or more institutions | 2 | ||
| 2. Response rate (select one) -Response rate is the proportion of those eligible who completed follow-up assessment. -Use "N/A" only if a response rate truly does not apply (e.g., data obtained from a medical record or professional organization database). | 2 | ||
| < 50% or not reported: | 0 | ||
| 50%–74% | 1 | ||
| ≥ 75% | 2 | ||
| N/A | 0 | ||
| Data analysis | |||
| 1. Appropriateness(select one) Considered “0” if there is statistical error or if authors failed to analyze data | 1 | ||
| Data analysis inappropriate for study design/type of data | 0 | ||
| Data analysis appropriate for study design and type of data | 1 | ||
| 2. Sophistication (select all that apply) (Any test of statistical inference is considered “beyond descriptive.”) | 2 | ||
| Descriptive analysis only | 0 | ||
| Beyond descriptive analysis | 1 | ||
| Includes power analysis | 1 | ||
| Discussion (select all that apply) | 3 | ||
| Data support conclusion | 1 | ||
| Conclusion clearly addresses hypothesis/objective | 1 | ||
| Conclusions placed in context of literature | 1 | ||
| Limitations (select one) | 2 | ||
| Limitations not identified accurately | 0 | ||
| Some limitations identified | 1 | ||
| Limitations well addressed | 2 | ||
| Innovation of project (select one) | 2 | ||
| Previously described methods | 0 | ||
| New use for known assessment/intervention | 1 | ||
| New assessment/intervention methodology | 2 | ||
| Relevance of project (select one) | 2 | ||
| Impractical to most programs | 0 | ||
| Relevant to some | 1 | ||
| Relevant to many programs | 2 | ||
| Clarity of writing (select one) | 2 | ||
| Unsatisfactory | 0 | ||
| Fair | 1 | ||
| Excellent | 2 | ||
| Total | 25 | ||
Qualitative Scoring Rubric
| Domain | Item | Item score | Max score | |
| Introduction (select all that apply) | 3 | |||
| Appropriate description of background literature | 1 | |||
| Clearly frame the problem | 1 | |||
| Clear objective/hypothesis | 1 | |||
| Measurement | 3 | |||
| 1. Methodology (select all that apply) | ||||
| Appropriate for study question | 1 | |||
| 2. Sampling of participants (select all that apply) | ||||
| Appropriate study population | 1 | |||
| Enrolled full range of cases/settings beyond convenience | 1 | |||
| Data Collection 1. Institutions (select one) Number of institutions refers to origin of study participants (not study authors) | 3 | |||
| 1 institution | 0 | |||
| 2 institutions | 1 | |||
| 3 or more institutions | 2 | |||
| 2. Sample size determination (select one) | ||||
| Appropriate sample size determination | 1 | |||
| Data analysis (select all that apply) | 5 | |||
| Clear, reproducible “audit trail” documenting systematic procedure for analysis | 1 | |||
| Data saturation through a systematic iterative process of analysis | 1 | |||
| Addressed contradictory responses | 1 | |||
| Incorporated validation strategies (e.g., member checking, triangulation) | 1 | |||
| Addressed reflexivity (impact of researcher’s background, position, biases on study) | 1 | |||
| Discussion (select all that apply) | 3 | |||
| Data support conclusion | 1 | |||
| Conclusion clearly addresses hypothesis/objective | 1 | |||
| Conclusions placed in context of literature | 1 | |||
| Limitations (select one) | 2 | |||
| Limitations not identified accurately | 0 | |||
| Some limitations identified | 1 | |||
| Limitations well addressed | 2 | |||
| Innovation of project (select one) | 2 | |||
| Previously described methods | 0 | |||
| New use for known assessment/intervention | 1 | |||
| New assessment/intervention methodology | 2 | |||
| Relevance of project (select one) | 2 | |||
| Impractical to most programs | 0 | |||
| Relevant to some | 1 | |||
| Relevant to many programs | 2 | |||
| Clarity of writing (select one) | 2 | |||
| Unsatisfactory | 0 | |||
| Fair | 1 | |||
| Excellent | 2 | |||
| Total | 25 | |||
Full List of Articles Included in the Critical Appraisal
| Article # | First Author | Title | Journal | Type |
| 1 | Artyomenko, VV | Anaesthesiologists' simulation training during emergencies in obstetrics | Romanian Journal of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care | Quantitative |
| 2 | Baker, K | A Feedback and Evaluation System That Provokes Minimal Retaliation by Trainees | Anesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 3 | Bakshi, SG | Role of WhatsApp-based discussions in improving residents' knowledge of post-operative pain management: a pilot study | Korean Journal of Anesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 4 | Bick, JS | Standard Setting for Clinical Performance of Basic Perioperative Transesophageal Echocardiography: Moving beyond the Written Test | Anesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 5 | Bloch, A | Impact of Simulator-Based Training in Focused Transesophageal Echocardiography: A Randomized Controlled Trial | Anesthesia & Analgesia | Quantitative |
| 6 | Bong, CL | The effects of active (hot-seat) versus observer roles during simulation-based training on stress levels and non-technical performance: a randomized trial | Adv Simul | Quantitative |
| 7 | Bracco, F | Adaptation of non-technical skills behavioural markers for delivery room simulation | BMC Pregnancy & Childbirth | Quantitative |
| 8 | Castanelli, DJ | Measuring the anaesthesia clinical learning environment at the department level is feasible and reliable | British Journal of Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 9 | Cole, DC | Resident Physicians Improve Nontechnical Skills When on Operating Room Management and Leadership Rotation | Anesthesia & Analgesia | Quantitative |
| 10 | Copson, S | The effect of a multidisciplinary obstetric emergency team training program, the In Time course, on diagnosis to delivery interval following umbilical cord prolapse - A retrospective cohort study | Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | Quantitative |
| 11 | Corvetto, MA | Validation of the imperial college surgical assessment device for spinal anesthesia | BMC Anesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 12 | Crane, MF | Positive Affect Is Associated With Reduced Fixation in a Realistic Medical Simulation | Hum Factors | Quantitative |
| 13 | Dexter, F | Content analysis of resident evaluations of faculty anesthesiologists: supervision encompasses some attributes of the professionalism core competency | Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia | Qualitative |
| 14 | Dexter, F | With directed study before a 4-day operating room management course, trust in the content did not change progressively during the classroom time | Journal of Clinical Anesthesia | Quantitative |
| 15 | Dexter, F | Measurement of faculty anesthesiologists' quality of clinical supervision has greater reliability when controlling for the leniency of the rating anesthesia resident: a retrospective cohort study | Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 16 | DuCanto, J | Novel Airway Training Tool that Simulates Vomiting: Suction-Assisted Laryngoscopy Assisted Decontamination (SALAD) System | The Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | Quantitative |
| 17 | Easdown, LJ | A Checklist to Help Faculty Assess ACGME Milestones in a Video-Recorded OSCE | J Grad Med Educ | Quantitative |
| 18 | Eloy, JD | Fellowships Represent a Logical Target for Cultivating Research in Academic Anesthesiology | J Educ Perioper Med | Quantitative |
| 19 | Ergun, S | Mentorship in anesthesia: a survey of perspectives among Canadian anesthesia residents | Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 20 | Evain, JN | Residual anxiety after high fidelity simulation in anaesthesiology: An observational, prospective, pilot study | Anaesthesia Critical Care and Pain Medicine | Quantitative |
| 21 | Friedman, Z | Challenging authority during an emergency - The effect of a teaching intervention | Critical Care Medicine | Quantitative |
| 22 | Geeraerts, T | Physiological and self-assessed psychological stress induced by a high fidelity simulation course among third year anesthesia and critical care residents: An observational study | Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine | Quantitative |
| 23 | Goldberg, A | Exposure to Simulated Mortality Affects Resident Performance During Assessment Scenarios | Simulation in Healthcare: The Journal of The Society for Medical Simulation | Quantitative |
| 24 | Gouin, A | Evolution of stress in anaesthesia registrars with repeated simulated courses: An observational study | Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine | Quantitative |
| 25 | Gupta, R | Career Development Guidance and Mentorship during Anesthesia Residency Training: An Internet Survey | The Journal of Education in Perioperative Medicine | Quantitative |
| 26 | Harvey, R | The impact of didactic read-aloud action cards on the performance of cannula cricothyroidotomy in a simulated ‘can't intubate can't oxygenate’– scenario | Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 27 | Heck, MC | An Evaluation of CA-1 Residents' Adherence to a Standardized Handoff Checklist | The Journal of Education in Perioperative Medicine | Quantitative |
| 28 | Howe, PW | A qualitative exploration of anesthesia trainees' experiences during transition to a children's hospital | Paediatric anaesthesia | Qualitative |
| 29 | Isaak, RS | A Descriptive Survey of Anesthesiology Residency Simulation Programs: How Are Programs Preparing Residents for the New American Board of Anesthesiology APPLIED Certification Examination? | Anesthesia & Analgesia | Quantitative |
| 30 | Isaranuwatchai, W | A cost-effectiveness analysis of self-debriefing versus instructor debriefing for simulated crises in perioperative medicine in Canada | Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions | Quantitative |
| 31 | Jirativanont, T | Validity evidence of non-technical skills assessment instruments in simulated anaesthesia crisis management | Anaesthesia & Intensive Care | Quantitative |
| 32 | Jullia, M | Training in intraoperative handover and display of a checklist improve communication during transfer of care: An interventional cohort study of anaesthesia residents and nurse anaesthetists | European journal of anaesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 33 | Katz, D | Serious gaming for orthotopic liver transplant anesthesiology: A randomized control trial | Liver Transplantation | Quantitative |
| 34 | Kaur, G | Global health education in United States anesthesiology residency programs: a survey of resident opportunities and program director attitudes | BMC Medical Education | Quantitative |
| 35 | Kimatian, S | Undirected learning styles and academic risk: Analysis of the impact of stress, strain and coping | J Educ Perioper Med | Quantitative |
| 36 | Kleiman, AM | Generative Retrieval Improves Learning and Retention of Cardiac Anatomy Using Transesophageal Echocardiography | Anesthesia & Analgesia | Quantitative |
| 37 | Lean, LL | End-task versus in-task feedback to increase procedural learning retention during spinal anaesthesia training of novices | Advances in Health Sciences Education | Quantitative |
| 38 | Lockman, JL | Working to define professionalism in pediatric anesthesiology: a qualitative study of domains of the expert pediatric anesthesiologist as valued by interdisciplinary stakeholders | Paediatric Anaesthesia | Qualitative |
| 39 | Marchalot, A | Effectiveness of a blended learning course and flipped classroom in first year anaesthesia training | Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine | Quantitative |
| 40 | Martinelli, SM | Results of a Flipped Classroom Teaching Approach in Anesthesiology Residents | Journal of Graduate Medical Education | Quantitative |
| 41 | Mehta, KH | Developing competency in post-graduate students of anaesthesiology for taking informed consent for elective caesarean section | Indian Journal of Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 42 | Merry, AF | Retesting the Hypothesis of a Clinical Randomized Controlled Trial in a Simulation Environment to Validate Anesthesia Simulation in Error Research (the VASER Study) | Anesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 43 | Mok, D | Point-of-care ultrasonography in Canadian anesthesiology residency programs: a national survey of program directors | Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 44 | Neal, JM | Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine: US Anesthesiology Resident Training-The Year 2015 | Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine | Quantitative |
| 45 | Ortega, R | An innovative textbook: design and implementation | Clin Teach | Quantitative |
| 46 | O'Shaughnessy, SM | First Year Specialist Anaesthesia Training in Ireland: A Logbook Analysis | International Journal of Higher Education | Quantitative |
| 47 | Ozcan, ATD | Comparison of endotracheal tube cuff pressure values before and after training seminar | Journal of Clinical Monitoring & Computing | Quantitative |
| 48 | Pelloux, S | Peripheral venous catheter insertion simulation training: A randomized controlled trial comparing performance after instructor-led teaching versus peer-assisted learning | Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine | Quantitative |
| 49 | Prin, M | International Elective Opportunities in United States Anesthesia Residency Programs | J Educ Perioper Med | Quantitative |
| 50 | Rinehart, J | Anesthesiology Residency Curriculum and Implementation of a Perioperative Surgical Home Curriculum: A Survey Study | J Educ Perioper Med | Quantitative |
| 51 | Robertson, AC | Using the Teaching Perspectives Inventory as an Introduction to a Residents-as-Teachers Curriculum | J Educ Perioper Med | Quantitative |
| 52 | Saddawi-Konefka, D | Changing Resident Physician Studying Behaviors: A Randomized, Comparative Effectiveness Trial of Goal Setting Versus Use of WOOP | Journal of Graduate Medical Education | Quantitative |
| 53 | Scott-Herring, M | Development, Implementation, and Evaluation of a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist Preceptorship-Mentorship Program | J Contin Educ Nurs | Quantitative |
| 54 | Sidi, A | Simulation-Based Assessment Identifies Longitudinal Changes in Cognitive Skills in an Anesthesiology Residency Training Program | Journal of patient safety | Quantitative |
| 55 | Spadaro, S | Simulation Training for Residents Focused on Mechanical Ventilation: A Randomized Trial Using Mannequin-Based Versus Computer-Based Simulation | Simulation in Healthcare | Quantitative |
| 56 | Stone, L | Point-of-contact assessment of nurse anesthetists' knowledge and perceptions of management of anesthesia-related critical incidents59 | AANA Journal | Quantitative |
| 57 | Vasian, HN | Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Residents' Perception of Simulation Training in Four Romanian Centres | The Journal of Critical Care Medicine | Quantitative |
| 58 | Watkins, SC | Evaluation of a Simpler Tool to Assess Nontechnical Skills During Simulated Critical Events | Simulation in Healthcare | Quantitative |
| 59 | Weller, JM | Making robust assessments of specialist trainees' workplace performance | British Journal of Anaesthesia | Quantitative |
| 60 | Wen, L | Encouraging Mindfulness in Medical House Staff via Smartphone App: A Pilot Study | Acad Psychiatry | Quantitative |
| 61 | Zhou, Y | Effect of the BASIC Examination on Knowledge Acquisition during Anesthesiology Residency | Anesthesiology | Quantitative |
| 62 | Zhou, Y | Effectiveness of Written and Oral Specialty Certification Examinations to Predict Actions against the Medical Licenses of Anesthesiologists | Anesthesiology | Quantitative |