Mary E McLean1, Thomas A Huls1, Adrian A Cotarelo1, Abbas Husain2, Joel C Park3, Jonathan C Chan1, Elizabeth S So1, Michael C Anana4, Angela S Chen5, Gordon K Chien6, Arlene S Chung7, Lukasz D Cygan8, Suman J Gupta7, Marc P Kanter9, Eric Lee7, Diksha Mishra3, Kristen M Ng10, Andrew J Restivo6, James T Russell9, Kaushal Shah3, R Taylor Surles11, Miriam L Kulkarni1. 1. Department of Emergency Medicine St. John's Riverside Hospital Yonkers NY USA. 2. Department of Emergency Medicine Staten Island University Hospital New York NY USA. 3. Department of Emergency Medicine Weill Cornell Medical College New York NY USA. 4. Department of Emergency Medicine Rutgers New Jersey Medical School Newark NJ USA. 5. Department of Emergency Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai New York NY USA. 6. Department of Emergency Medicine Jacobi-Montefiore Emergency Medicine Residency Bronx NY USA. 7. Department of Emergency Medicine Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn NY USA. 8. Department of Emergency Medicine NewYork-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital Brooklyn NY USA. 9. Department of Emergency Medicine Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center Bronx NY USA. 10. Department of Emergency Medicine New York University Bellevue Hospital New York NY USA. 11. Department of Emergency Medicine State University of New York Downstate/Kings County Medical Center Brooklyn NY USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The objective was to bridge the relative educational gap for newly matched emergency medicine preinterns between Match Day and the start of internship by implementing an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Milestone (ACGME)-based virtual case curriculum over the social media platform Slack. METHODS: We designed a Milestone-based curriculum of 10 emergency department clinical cases and used Slack to implement it. An instructor was appointed for each participating institution to lead the discussion and encourage collaboration among preinterns. Pre- and postcurriculum surveys utilized 20 statements adapted from the eight applicable Milestones to measure the evolution of preintern self-reported perceived preparedness (PP) as well as actual clinical knowledge (CK) performance on a case-based examination. RESULTS: A total of 11 institutions collaborated and 151 preinterns were contacted, 127 of whom participated. After participating in the Slack intern curriculum (SIC), preinterns reported significant improvements in PP regarding multiple Milestone topics. They also showed improved CK regarding the airway management Milestone based on examination performance. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of our SIC may ease the difficult transition between medical school and internship for emergency medicine preinterns. Residency leadership and medical school faculty will benefit from knowledge of preintern PP, specifically of their perceived strengths and weaknesses, because this information can guide curricular focus at the end of medical school and beginning of internship. Limitations of this study include variable participation and a high attrition rate. Further studies will address the utility of such a virtual curriculum for preinterns and for rotating medical students who have been displaced from clinical rotations during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
OBJECTIVES: The objective was to bridge the relative educational gap for newly matched emergency medicine preinterns between Match Day and the start of internship by implementing an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Milestone (ACGME)-based virtual case curriculum over the social media platform Slack. METHODS: We designed a Milestone-based curriculum of 10 emergency department clinical cases and used Slack to implement it. An instructor was appointed for each participating institution to lead the discussion and encourage collaboration among preinterns. Pre- and postcurriculum surveys utilized 20 statements adapted from the eight applicable Milestones to measure the evolution of preintern self-reported perceived preparedness (PP) as well as actual clinical knowledge (CK) performance on a case-based examination. RESULTS: A total of 11 institutions collaborated and 151 preinterns were contacted, 127 of whom participated. After participating in the Slack intern curriculum (SIC), preinterns reported significant improvements in PP regarding multiple Milestone topics. They also showed improved CK regarding the airway management Milestone based on examination performance. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of our SIC may ease the difficult transition between medical school and internship for emergency medicine preinterns. Residency leadership and medical school faculty will benefit from knowledge of preintern PP, specifically of their perceived strengths and weaknesses, because this information can guide curricular focus at the end of medical school and beginning of internship. Limitations of this study include variable participation and a high attrition rate. Further studies will address the utility of such a virtual curriculum for preinterns and for rotating medical students who have been displaced from clinical rotations during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
Authors: Francis L Counselman; Kavita Babu; Mary Ann Edens; Diane L Gorgas; Cherri Hobgood; Catherine A Marco; Eric Katz; Kevin Rodgers; Leonard A Stallings; Michael C Wadman; Michael S Beeson; Julia N Keehbauch Journal: J Emerg Med Date: 2017-03-25 Impact factor: 1.484
Authors: Rebecca M Minter; Keith D Amos; Michael L Bentz; Patrice Gabler Blair; Christopher Brandt; Jonathan D'Cunha; Elisabeth Davis; Keith A Delman; Ellen S Deutsch; Celia Divino; Darra Kingsley; Mary Klingensmith; Sarkis Meterissian; Ajit K Sachdeva; Kyla Terhune; Paula M Termuhlen; Patricia B Mullan Journal: Acad Med Date: 2015-08 Impact factor: 6.893
Authors: Mary E McLean; Adrian A Cotarelo; Thomas A Huls; Abbas Husain; Emily A Hillman; Lukasz D Cygan; Linette O Archer; Jennifer Beck-Esmay; Shannon M Burke; Angela I Carrick; Angela S Chen; Robert J Hyde; Vytas P Karalius; Eric Lee; Joel C Park; Angela M Pugliese; Morgan D Wilbanks; Amanda Young; Miriam L Kulkarni Journal: J Grad Med Educ Date: 2021-12-14