Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It

Abstract The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education announced in 2012 that the next round of accreditation standards, the Clinical Learning Environment Review (CLER) program, would seek to “generate national data on program and institutional attributes that have a salutary effect on qu...

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Main Authors: Elliot Tapper, Amy Sullivan, Anjala Tess
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association of American Medical Colleges 2015-09-01
Series:MedEdPORTAL
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mededportal.org/doi/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10211
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author Elliot Tapper
Amy Sullivan
Anjala Tess
author_facet Elliot Tapper
Amy Sullivan
Anjala Tess
author_sort Elliot Tapper
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education announced in 2012 that the next round of accreditation standards, the Clinical Learning Environment Review (CLER) program, would seek to “generate national data on program and institutional attributes that have a salutary effect on quality and safety in settings where residents learn and on the quality of care rendered after graduation.” The CLER program's ultimate goal is to encourage the graduate medical education learning environment to deliver both high-quality physicians and safer, higher quality patient care. Graduate medical education programs are being asked to formally teach their trainees quality improvement (QI) and patient safety by engaging them in their institutional QI work. We believe that the key to engaging trainees in this work is to immerse them in solving the problems they see every day in their environment. We have developed a modular QI curriculum with the goals of framing clinical problems in a QI context, efficiently teaching house staff about a specific clinical topic while enhancing knowledge of QI methodology, allowing house staff to contribute to the improvement of a relevant clinical process, and achieving CLER goals in the context of a specific clinical rotation. The approach we detail can be adapted to any clinical environment. We implemented our quality improvement (QI) curriculum as a longitudinal program that spanned multiple rotations of house staff as a lunchtime talk format. Each successive group of rotating house staff builds on the progress of the last. The goal of the curriculum was to increase practical knowledge regarding QI intervention implementation. While this can be applied in any setting, we deployed this among medicine house staff rotating on a liver service. Our target audience is any teaching service (medicine or otherwise). The effectiveness of our program is measured in two ways. First, the program was able to produce tangible, implemented QI interventions that continue to impact care. Second, all participants completed a pre− and postsurvey that is used to assess engagement in ACGME CLER goals and obtainment of medical knowledge. Our review of the survey results demonstrates significant increases in engagement and knowledge.
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spelling doaj.art-c23c3a9baba641e2ac122ab0c22b6a972022-12-21T21:19:23ZengAssociation of American Medical CollegesMedEdPORTAL2374-82652015-09-011110.15766/mep_2374-8265.10211Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do ItElliot Tapper0Amy Sullivan1Anjala Tess21 Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center2 Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center3 Beth Israel Deaconess Medical CenterAbstract The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education announced in 2012 that the next round of accreditation standards, the Clinical Learning Environment Review (CLER) program, would seek to “generate national data on program and institutional attributes that have a salutary effect on quality and safety in settings where residents learn and on the quality of care rendered after graduation.” The CLER program's ultimate goal is to encourage the graduate medical education learning environment to deliver both high-quality physicians and safer, higher quality patient care. Graduate medical education programs are being asked to formally teach their trainees quality improvement (QI) and patient safety by engaging them in their institutional QI work. We believe that the key to engaging trainees in this work is to immerse them in solving the problems they see every day in their environment. We have developed a modular QI curriculum with the goals of framing clinical problems in a QI context, efficiently teaching house staff about a specific clinical topic while enhancing knowledge of QI methodology, allowing house staff to contribute to the improvement of a relevant clinical process, and achieving CLER goals in the context of a specific clinical rotation. The approach we detail can be adapted to any clinical environment. We implemented our quality improvement (QI) curriculum as a longitudinal program that spanned multiple rotations of house staff as a lunchtime talk format. Each successive group of rotating house staff builds on the progress of the last. The goal of the curriculum was to increase practical knowledge regarding QI intervention implementation. While this can be applied in any setting, we deployed this among medicine house staff rotating on a liver service. Our target audience is any teaching service (medicine or otherwise). The effectiveness of our program is measured in two ways. First, the program was able to produce tangible, implemented QI interventions that continue to impact care. Second, all participants completed a pre− and postsurvey that is used to assess engagement in ACGME CLER goals and obtainment of medical knowledge. Our review of the survey results demonstrates significant increases in engagement and knowledge.http://www.mededportal.org/doi/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10211ACGMEInternal MedicineLiver DiseasesCLER Goals
spellingShingle Elliot Tapper
Amy Sullivan
Anjala Tess
Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It
MedEdPORTAL
ACGME
Internal Medicine
Liver Diseases
CLER Goals
title Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It
title_full Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It
title_fullStr Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It
title_short Teaching Quality Improvement on the Wards: How We Do It
title_sort teaching quality improvement on the wards how we do it
topic ACGME
Internal Medicine
Liver Diseases
CLER Goals
url http://www.mededportal.org/doi/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10211
work_keys_str_mv AT elliottapper teachingqualityimprovementonthewardshowwedoit
AT amysullivan teachingqualityimprovementonthewardshowwedoit
AT anjalatess teachingqualityimprovementonthewardshowwedoit