Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores?
Introduction: In-service exam scores are used by residency programs as a marker for progress and success on board exams. Conference curriculum helps residents prepare for these exams. At our institution, due to resident feedback a change in curriculum was initiated. Our objective was to determine wh...
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doaj-74a25d9e01414d4585b00e70177fe0272020-11-25T02:05:11ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaWestern Journal of Emergency Medicine1936-90182020-01-0121210.5811/westjem.2019.11.44639wjem-21-434Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores?Christine JuJoseph BoveSteven HochmanIntroduction: In-service exam scores are used by residency programs as a marker for progress and success on board exams. Conference curriculum helps residents prepare for these exams. At our institution, due to resident feedback a change in curriculum was initiated. Our objective was to determine whether assigned Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) articles and Rosh Review questions were non-inferior to Tintinalli textbook readings. We further hypothesized that the non-textbook assigned curriculum would lead to higher resident satisfaction, greater utilization, and a preference over the old curriculum. Methods: We collected scores from both the allopathic In-training Examination (ITE) and osteopathic Emergency Medicine Residency In-service Exam (RISE) scores taken by our program’s residents from both the 2015–2016 and 2016–2017 residency years. We compared scores pre-curriculum change (pre-CC) to scores post-curriculum change (post-CC). A five-question survey was sent to the residents regarding their satisfaction, preference, and utilization of the two curricula. Results: Resident scores post-CC were shown to be non-inferior to their scores pre-CC for both exams. There was also no significant difference when we compared scores from each class post-CC to their respective class year pre-CC for both exams. Our survey showed significantly more satisfaction, utilization, and preference for this new curriculum among residents. Conclusion: We found question-based learning and Evidence-Based Medicine articles non-inferior to textbook readings. This study provides evidence to support a move away from textbook readings without sacrificing scores on examinations.https://escholarship.org/uc/item/93c0t4gp |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Christine Ju Joseph Bove Steven Hochman |
spellingShingle |
Christine Ju Joseph Bove Steven Hochman Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores? Western Journal of Emergency Medicine |
author_facet |
Christine Ju Joseph Bove Steven Hochman |
author_sort |
Christine Ju |
title |
Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores? |
title_short |
Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores? |
title_full |
Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores? |
title_fullStr |
Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Does the Removal of Textbook Reading from Emergency Medicine Resident Education Negatively Affect In-Service Scores? |
title_sort |
does the removal of textbook reading from emergency medicine resident education negatively affect in-service scores? |
publisher |
eScholarship Publishing, University of California |
series |
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine |
issn |
1936-9018 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
Introduction: In-service exam scores are used by residency programs as a marker for progress and success on board exams. Conference curriculum helps residents prepare for these exams. At our institution, due to resident feedback a change in curriculum was initiated. Our objective was to determine whether assigned Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) articles and Rosh Review questions were non-inferior to Tintinalli textbook readings. We further hypothesized that the non-textbook assigned curriculum would lead to higher resident satisfaction, greater utilization, and a preference over the old curriculum. Methods: We collected scores from both the allopathic In-training Examination (ITE) and osteopathic Emergency Medicine Residency In-service Exam (RISE) scores taken by our program’s residents from both the 2015–2016 and 2016–2017 residency years. We compared scores pre-curriculum change (pre-CC) to scores post-curriculum change (post-CC). A five-question survey was sent to the residents regarding their satisfaction, preference, and utilization of the two curricula. Results: Resident scores post-CC were shown to be non-inferior to their scores pre-CC for both exams. There was also no significant difference when we compared scores from each class post-CC to their respective class year pre-CC for both exams. Our survey showed significantly more satisfaction, utilization, and preference for this new curriculum among residents. Conclusion: We found question-based learning and Evidence-Based Medicine articles non-inferior to textbook readings. This study provides evidence to support a move away from textbook readings without sacrificing scores on examinations. |
url |
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/93c0t4gp |
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