4.5 Article

Clinical teaching and clinical outcomes: teaching capability and its association with patient outcomes

Journal

MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 637-644

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2929.2006.02508.x

Keywords

multicentre study; humans; teaching, standards; internal medicine, education; education, medical, graduate, standards; Ontario; patient care team; cross-sectional studies; retrospective studies; length of stay; quality of health care; heart failure, congestive, therapy; pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive, therapy; gastrointestinal haemorrhage, therapy; pneumonia, therapy; community acquired infections, therapy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BACKGROUND There is little research on the impact of medical education on patient outcome. We studied whether teaching capability is associated with altered short-term patient outcomes. METHODS We performed a multicentre retrospective cross-sectional study involving 40 clinician teachers who had attended on the general internal medicine services in hospitals affiliated with the University of Toronto along with the clinical outcomes of consecutive patients treated for community-acquired pneumonia, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 4377) between 1999 and 2001. Doctors were characterised by teaching effectiveness scores (n = 677) as high-rated or low-rated according to house staff ratings. RESULTS There was no correlation between the teaching effectiveness scores and the mean length of stay for those patients treated for community-acquired pneumonia (high-rated = 10.3 versus low-rated = 8.1 days, P = 0.058), congestive heart failure (high-rated = 10.1 versus low-rated = 9.9 days, P = 0.978), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (high-rated = 9.4 versus low-rated = 9.9 days, P = 0.419) and gastrointestinal bleeding (high-rated = 6.3 versus low-rated = 6.8 days, P = 0.741). In addition, we observed no significant correlation between teaching effectiveness scores and 7-day, 28-day and 1-year readmission rates for all pre-specified diagnoses. CONCLUSION There is no large correlation between teaching effectiveness scores and short-term patient outcomes, suggesting that doctor teaching capabilities, as perceived by house staff, does not generally impact clinical care.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available