Evaluation of a National Addiction Medicine Curriculum for Primary Care Physicians

IF 3.2 3区 管理学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Education and Training Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1370/afm.21.s1.4029
Matthew R. Martin, Randi G Sokol
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Abstract

CONTEXT: Substance use disorders (SUDs) are a leading cause of death, disability, and disease in the U.S. Primary care physicians are well-positioned to address SUD treatment gap, increase access, destigmatize addiction; a 2015 study of family medicine residency programs suggests less than 30% have an addiction medicine curriculum. Lack of faculty expertise was the most commonly cited barrier to not having a curriculum. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate impact of a national addiction medicine curriculum on 25 residency programs. DESIGN/ANALYSIS: We conducted 4 1-hour-long focus groups with residents who participated in the curriculum and four one-hour-long focus groups with faculty members who taught the curriculum. We used software and qualitative thematic analysis to analyze recordings. SETTING: Family medicine residency programs. POP STUDIED: Sites represented diverse settings (rural and urban, academic and community-based) and addiction backgrounds (ranging from no prior addiction curriculum to robust prior addiction curriculum) and included 14 states from across the country (CA, WA, PA, NV, MO, CO, NC, IL, MN, KY, IL, MI, TX, MD). INTERVENTION: We exposed residents to competency-based addiction medicine curriculum, a collection of 12 on-line learning modules and 12 in-person classroom sessions. Modules included quizzes, reflections, cases, demo videos. We exposed faculty to 12-month faculty development series, with faculty website, teacher’s guide for classroom sessions, peer support & learning. OUTCOMES: Six faculty focus group questions measuring impact on resident patient care, precepting, other faculty members, recommendations for improvement, innovations, and overall value. Six resident focus group questions measuring perception of learning format, changes in patient care, precepting changes, professional impact, recommendations for improvement, and overall value. RESULTS: Curriculum enriched resident and faculty knowledge across all topics, changed attitudes in viewing addiction as a chronic disease and within the scope of family medicine practice, increased confidence, and decreased stigma. Nurtured behavior change, enhancing communication and assessment skills and encouraging collaboration across disciplines. Participants valued flipped-classroom approach, videos, cases, role plays, teacher’s guides, and 1-pg summaries. CONCLUSION: The curriculum provides a comprehensive, ready-made, evidenced-based platform for training residents and faculty in SUDs.
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初级保健医师国家成瘾医学课程评估
背景:物质使用障碍(SUD)是美国死亡、残疾和疾病的主要原因,初级保健医生有能力解决SUD治疗差距,增加可及性,去污名化成瘾;2015年对家庭医学住院医师项目的一项研究表明,只有不到30%的人有成瘾医学课程。缺乏教师专业知识是没有课程最常见的障碍。目的:评估国家成瘾医学课程对25个住院医师项目的影响。设计/分析:我们与参加课程的住院医师进行了4次1小时的焦点小组讨论,与教授课程的教师进行了4次1小时的焦点小组讨论。我们使用软件和定性专题分析来分析录音。环境:家庭医学住院医师项目。POP研究:地点代表了不同的环境(农村和城市,学术和社区)和成瘾背景(从没有先前的成瘾课程到强大的先前成瘾课程),包括来自全国各地的14个州(CA, WA, PA, NV, MO, CO, NC, IL, MN, KY, IL, MI, TX, MD)。干预:我们让住院医生学习基于能力的成瘾医学课程,包括12个在线学习模块和12个面对面的课堂课程。模块包括测验、反思、案例、演示视频。我们让全体教员参加了为期12个月的教员发展系列活动,包括教员网站、教师课堂指导、同伴支持和学习。结果:六个教师焦点小组问题衡量对住院病人护理、训导、其他教师、改进建议、创新和整体价值的影响。六个住院医师焦点小组问题测量对学习形式的感知,患者护理的变化,感知变化,专业影响,改进建议和总体价值。结果:课程丰富了住院医生和教师对所有主题的知识,改变了将成瘾视为一种慢性疾病和家庭医学实践范围内的态度,增加了信心,减少了耻辱。培养行为改变,加强沟通和评估技能,鼓励跨学科合作。参与者重视翻转课堂教学方法、视频、案例、角色扮演、教师指导和1-pg摘要。结论:该课程为培训住院医师和教师提供了一个全面的、现成的、以证据为基础的平台。
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来源期刊
Education and Training
Education and Training EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
13.90%
发文量
57
期刊介绍: Education + Training addresses the increasingly complex relationships between education, training and employment and the impact of these relationships on national and global labour markets. The journal gives specific consideration to young people, looking at how the transition from school/college to employment is achieved and how the nature of partnerships between the worlds of education and work continues to evolve. The journal explores vocationalism in learning and efforts to address employability within the curriculum, together with coverage of innovative themes and initiatives within vocational education and training. The journal is read by policy makers, educators and academics working in a wide range of fields including education, learning and skills development, enterprise and entrepreneurship education and training, induction and career development. Coverage: Managing the transition from school/college to work New initiatives in post 16 vocational education and training Education-Business partnerships and collaboration Links between education and industry The graduate labour market Work experience and placements The recruitment, induction and development of school leavers and graduates Young person employability and career development E learning in further and higher education Research news Reviews of recent publications.
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