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A novel bedside cardiopulmonary physical diagnosis curriculum for internal medicine postgraduate training.

Authors :
Garibaldi BT
Niessen T
Gelber AC
Clark B
Lee Y
Madrazo JA
Manesh RS
Apfel A
Lau BD
Liu G
Canzoniero JV
Sperati CJ
Yeh HC
Brotman DJ
Traill TA
Cayea D
Durso SC
Stewart RW
Corretti MC
Kasper EK
Desai SV
Source :
BMC medical education [BMC Med Educ] 2017 Oct 06; Vol. 17 (1), pp. 182. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Oct 06.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Physicians spend less time at the bedside in the modern hospital setting which has contributed to a decline in physical diagnosis, and in particular, cardiopulmonary examination skills. This trend may be a source of diagnostic error and threatens to erode the patient-physician relationship. We created a new bedside cardiopulmonary physical diagnosis curriculum and assessed its effects on post-graduate year-1 (PGY-1; interns) attitudes, confidence and skill.<br />Methods: One hundred five internal medicine interns in a large U.S. internal medicine residency program participated in the Advancing Bedside Cardiopulmonary Examination Skills (ACE) curriculum while rotating on a general medicine inpatient service between 2015 and 2017. Teaching sessions included exam demonstrations using healthy volunteers and real patients, imaging didactics, computer learning/high-fidelity simulation, and bedside teaching with experienced clinicians. Primary outcomes were attitudes, confidence and skill in the cardiopulmonary physical exam as determined by a self-assessment survey, and a validated online cardiovascular examination (CE).<br />Results: Interns who participated in ACE (ACE interns) by mid-year more strongly agreed they had received adequate training in the cardiopulmonary exam compared with non-ACE interns. ACE interns were more confident than non-ACE interns in performing a cardiac exam, assessing the jugular venous pressure, distinguishing 'a' from 'v' waves, and classifying systolic murmurs as crescendo-decrescendo or holosystolic. Only ACE interns had a significant improvement in score on the mid-year CE.<br />Conclusions: A comprehensive bedside cardiopulmonary physical diagnosis curriculum improved trainee attitudes, confidence and skill in the cardiopulmonary examination. These results provide an opportunity to re-examine the way physical examination is taught and assessed in residency training programs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1472-6920
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC medical education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28985729
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-017-1020-2