| Literature DB >> 32789665 |
Alexander Chorley1,2, Khalid Azzam2,3,4, Teresa M Chan5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The world of medicine is constantly changing, and with it the continuing professional development (CPD) needs of physicians. As the CPD landscape is shifting away from unidirectional delivery of knowledge through live large group learning (conferences) and is placing increased emphasis on new approaches for skills training not taught a decade ago, a new approach is needed. APPROACH: Using design thinking techniques, we hosted a full-day retreat for emergency medicine stakeholders in Hamilton and the surrounding region. Prior to the retreat we collected medico-legal data on emergency physicians in our region and performed a needs assessment survey. At the retreat, we had participants brainstorm ideas for CPD, generate archetypes for end-users, then generate solutions to the problems they had identified. These proposals were presented to the larger group for feedback and refinement. EVALUATION: The Design Thinking Retreat generated five main pillars for action by our CPD team. 1) Simulation/procedural learning (staff simulation, procedural skills day, in situ simulation); 2) Asynchronous learning (website and podcast); 3) Synchronous learning (small group sessions for staff); 4) Community connectivity (online platform for collaboration and communication); and 5) Coaching & mentorship (focused coaching for specific practice improvement, improved onboarding for new staff). REFLECTION: These ideas have vastly increased engagement in CPD. Stakeholder consultation via design thinking may be a key approach for educators to use.Entities:
Keywords: Continuing medical education; Continuing professional development; Design thinking; Strategic planning
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 32789665 PMCID: PMC8941037 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-020-00604-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
Regional needs assessment survey responses
| Questions | Responses ( |
|---|---|
| Years in practice | <5 years –35.4% |
| 5–10 years – 21.5% | |
| 10–20 years – 16.5% | |
| >20 years – 25.3% | |
| Practice sites | Community ED – 64.1% |
| Tertiary care ED – 44.9% | |
| Urgent care – 38.5% | |
| Pediatric ED – 10.3% | |
| Training path | CCFP-EM – 41.8% |
| FRCPC-EM – 31.6% | |
| CCFP – 11.4% | |
| FRCPC-PEM – 7.6% | |
| Allied health – 3.9% | |
| ABEM – 3.8% | |
| What are some roadblocks preventing you from further developing your career? | Lack of time 40% ( |
| Lack of resource/funding 12.5% ( | |
| Lack of motivation/burnout 11.3% ( | |
| Lack of opportunities 10% ( | |
| Lack of mentorship 7.5% ( | |
| What types of continuing professional education are you currently doing? | Conferences – 86.3% |
| Podcasts – 77.6% | |
| Journal articles – 70.1% | |
| Rounds/lectures – 63.8% | |
| Workshops – 36.3% | |
| Simulation – 3.9% | |
| What do you wish staff physician continuing professional education looked like? | Staff-only small group discussions |
| ‘Education responsive to our needs’ | |
| Improved remote access/curated online content | |
| Staff simulation | |
| Procedural skills workshops |
ED emergency department, CCFP Canadian College of Family Physicians, EM emergency medicine, FRCPC Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Canada, PEM Pediatric Emergency Medicine, ABEM American Board of Emergency Medicine
Fig. 1Depicting the process flow of information collection before our event, and distribution during the event