4.6 Article

Effect of an Immersive Primary Care Training Program on Educational and Clinical Outcomes in an Internal Medicine Residency Training Program: Meeting the Training Needs of a Modern-Day Physician Workforce

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 37, Issue 11, Pages 2634-2641

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-07101-z

Keywords

graduate medical education; primary care training

Funding

  1. Harvard Catalyst National Institutes of Health [1UL1 TR001102-01]
  2. Harvard University

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This study examined the impact of a novel immersive primary care training program on educational and clinical outcomes for residents. Findings suggest that providing more training in the ambulatory setting can improve educational outcomes for trainees and clinical outcomes for their patients.
Background Residents planning careers in primary care have unique training needs that are not addressed in traditional internal medicine training programs, where there is a focus on inpatient training. There are no evidence-based approaches for primary care training. Objectives Design and test the effect of a novel immersive primary care training program on educational and clinical outcomes. Design Nested intervention study. Setting, Participants Twelve primary care residents, 86 of their categorical peers, and an 11-year historical cohort of 69 primary care trainees in a large urban internal medicine residency training program. Interventions Two 6-month blocks of primary care immersion alternating with two 6-month blocks of standard residency training during the second and third post-graduate years. Main Measures Total amount of ambulatory and inpatient training time, subjective and objective educational outcomes, clinical performance on cancer screening, and chronic disease management outcomes. Key Results Participants in the intervention increased ambulatory training in both general medicine and specialty medicine and still met all ACGME training requirements. Residents reported improved subjective educational outcomes on a variety of chronic disease management topics and ambulatory care skills. They reported higher satisfaction with the amount of ambulatory training (4.3/5 vs. 3.6/5, p=0.008), attended more ambulatory clinics (242 vs. 154, p<0.001), and carried larger, more complicated panels (173 vs. 90 patients, p<0.001). They also performed better on diabetes management (86% vs. 76% control, p<0.001). Alumni who completed the intervention reported higher primary care career preparation (79% response rate) than those who did not (85% response rate) among an 11-year cohort of primary care alumni (4/5 vs. 3/5, p<0.001). Conclusions A primary care training program that provides clinical immersion in the ambulatory setting improved educational outcomes for trainees and clinical outcomes for their patients. Providing more training in the ambulatory environment should be a priority in graduate medical education.

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