4.6 Article

Interactive Patient Safety and Quality Improvement capstone during transition-to-residency program: virtual and in-person focused workshop for EPA 13

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BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-023-04220-5

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Communication; Medical education; Patient safety; Quality improvement; Transition to residency; Team-based learning

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This workshop helped late Clerkship phase students apply Health Systems Science principles to real adverse patient event cases, improving their ability to identify safety events and understand quality improvement and team collaboration.
Identifying systems failures and contributing to a safety culture is the Association of American Colleges (AAMC's) thirteenth Entrustable Professional Activity (EPA). While most curricula teach Patient Safety (PS) and Quality Improvement (QI) principles, student participation in live QI/PS activities remains limited. This workshop enabled late Clerkship phase students to apply these Health Systems Science (HSS) principles to real adverse patient event cases through team-based simulation.This 3-h capstone included both a didactic review of QI, PS, and TeamSTEPPS (R) tools and an experiential component where student-led interactive small group discussions were augmented by resident and faculty preceptors. Collaboratively, students composed an adverse patient event report, conducted a Root Cause Analysis (RCA) during role-play, and proposed error prevention ideas after identifying systems problems. In April 2020, the in-person workshop became fully virtual due to the COVID-19 pandemic.A statistically significant increase in ability to identify Serious Safety Events, Escalation Chain of Command, and define a Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle was observed. Comfort with RCA increased from 48 to 87% and comfort with TeamSTEPPS (R) principles increased from 68% to 85.5%This novel capstone provided students with the tools to synthesize HSS concepts through problem-solving processes and recognize EPA 13's importance. Their increased capability to identify appropriate chain of command, escalate concerns, and recognize serious adverse patient events also has training and practice readiness implications.

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