TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of a National Academic Boot Camp to Improve Fellowship Readiness
AU - Drake, Matthew G.
AU - Shah, Nirav G.
AU - Lee, May
AU - Brady, Anna
AU - Connors, Geoffrey R.
AU - Clark, Brendan J.
AU - Kritek, Patricia A.
AU - McCallister, Jennifer W.
AU - Burkart, Kristin M.
AU - Pedraza, Isabel
AU - Jamieson, Daniel
AU - Ingram, Jennifer L.
AU - Lynch, Lauren
AU - Makani, Samir S.
AU - Siegel-Gasiewsk, Jennifer
AU - Larsson, Eileen M.
AU - Zemanick, Edith T.
AU - Liptzin, Deborah R.
AU - Good, Ryan
AU - Alexander, Laura E.Crotty
N1 - Funding Information:
The American Thoracic Society gratefully acknowledges the following companies for their educational and in-kind support of the Resident Boot Camp Program from 2014 to 2019. Educational grant support was generously provided by Olympus Corporation of the Americas. In-kind grant support was provided by Abbott Laboratories, Ambu, AstraZeneca LP, BD, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Bryan Corporation, CareFusion Corporation, Clement Clark International, CONMED, Cook Medical, LLC, Erbe USA, Inc., Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, Fujifilm SonoSite, Inc., Getinge, GlaxoSmithKline, Hamilton Medical, Inc., Hill-Rom, Medtronic, MicroDirect, Inc., Mindray, Monaghan Medical Corporation, Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc., ndd Medical Technologies, Inc., nSpire Health, Inc., Olympus Corporation of the Americas, Philips Respironics, ResMed, Richard Wolf Medical Instruments Corp., Smiths Medical, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Teleflex, Inc., Teva Pharmaceuticals, Verathon, and Vyaire Medical.
Funding Information:
Beyond personnel, financial support remains the greatest challenge to sustainability. A clear commitment from a supporting institution and/or professional society is an integral part to creating a long-lasting program worthy of attracting educators and trainees. Reinforcing the value of such a program for attendees and for a sponsoring institution is a necessary practice, lest the impact of these programs gets overlooked during challenging budget cycles.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2021 by the American Thoracic Society.
PY - 2021/3
Y1 - 2021/3
N2 - Background: Pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowship requires a high degree of medical knowledge and procedural competency. Gaps in fellowship readiness can result in significant trainee anxiety related to starting fellowship training. Objective: To improve fellowship readiness and alleviate anxiety for PCCM-bound trainees by improving confidence in procedural skills and cognitive domains. Methods: Medical educators within the American Thoracic Society developed a national resident boot camp (RBC) to provide an immersive, experiential training program for physicians enteringPCCMfellowships. TheRBCcurriculumis a 2-day course designed to build procedural skills, medical knowledge, and clinical confidence through high-fidelity simulation and active learning methodology. Separate programs for adult and pediatric providers run concurrently to provide unique training objectives targeted to their learners' needs. Trainee assessments include multiple-choice pre- and post-RBC knowledge tests and confidence assessments, which are scored on a four-point Likert scale, for specific PCCM-related procedural and cognitive skills. Learners also evaluate course material and educator effectiveness, which guide modifications of future RBC programs and provide feedback for individual educators, respectively. Results: The American Thoracic Society RBC was implemented in 2014 and has grown annually to include 132 trainees and more than 100 faculty members. Mean knowledge test scores for participants in the 2019 RBC adult program increased from 55% (±14% SD) on the pretest to 72% (±11% SD; P <0.001) after RBC completion. Similarly, mean pretest scores for pediatric course attendees increased from 54% (±13% SD) to 62% (±19% SD; P= 0.17). Specific content domains that improved by 10% or more between pre- and posttests included airway management, bronchoscopy, pulmonary function testing, and code management for adult course participants, and airway management, pulmonary function testing, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for pediatric course participants. Trainee confidence also significantly improved across all procedural and cognitive domains for adult trainees and in 10 of 11 domains for pediatric course attendees. Course content for the 2019 RBC was overwhelmingly rated as "on target"for the level of learner, with <4% of respondents indicating any specific session was "much too basic"or "much too advanced."Conclusion: RBC participation improved PCCM-bound trainee knowledge, procedural familiarity, and confidence. Refinement of the RBC curriculum over the past 7 years has been guided by educator and course evaluations, with the ongoing goal of meeting the evolving educational needs of rising PCCM trainees.
AB - Background: Pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowship requires a high degree of medical knowledge and procedural competency. Gaps in fellowship readiness can result in significant trainee anxiety related to starting fellowship training. Objective: To improve fellowship readiness and alleviate anxiety for PCCM-bound trainees by improving confidence in procedural skills and cognitive domains. Methods: Medical educators within the American Thoracic Society developed a national resident boot camp (RBC) to provide an immersive, experiential training program for physicians enteringPCCMfellowships. TheRBCcurriculumis a 2-day course designed to build procedural skills, medical knowledge, and clinical confidence through high-fidelity simulation and active learning methodology. Separate programs for adult and pediatric providers run concurrently to provide unique training objectives targeted to their learners' needs. Trainee assessments include multiple-choice pre- and post-RBC knowledge tests and confidence assessments, which are scored on a four-point Likert scale, for specific PCCM-related procedural and cognitive skills. Learners also evaluate course material and educator effectiveness, which guide modifications of future RBC programs and provide feedback for individual educators, respectively. Results: The American Thoracic Society RBC was implemented in 2014 and has grown annually to include 132 trainees and more than 100 faculty members. Mean knowledge test scores for participants in the 2019 RBC adult program increased from 55% (±14% SD) on the pretest to 72% (±11% SD; P <0.001) after RBC completion. Similarly, mean pretest scores for pediatric course attendees increased from 54% (±13% SD) to 62% (±19% SD; P= 0.17). Specific content domains that improved by 10% or more between pre- and posttests included airway management, bronchoscopy, pulmonary function testing, and code management for adult course participants, and airway management, pulmonary function testing, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for pediatric course participants. Trainee confidence also significantly improved across all procedural and cognitive domains for adult trainees and in 10 of 11 domains for pediatric course attendees. Course content for the 2019 RBC was overwhelmingly rated as "on target"for the level of learner, with <4% of respondents indicating any specific session was "much too basic"or "much too advanced."Conclusion: RBC participation improved PCCM-bound trainee knowledge, procedural familiarity, and confidence. Refinement of the RBC curriculum over the past 7 years has been guided by educator and course evaluations, with the ongoing goal of meeting the evolving educational needs of rising PCCM trainees.
KW - active learning
KW - boot camp
KW - fellowship
KW - medical education
KW - simulation
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U2 - 10.34197/ats-scholar.2020-0091OC
DO - 10.34197/ats-scholar.2020-0091OC
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85108677274
SN - 2690-7097
VL - 2
SP - 49
EP - 65
JO - ATS Scholar
JF - ATS Scholar
IS - 1
ER -