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A Multimodal, Resident-led Newborn Emergencies Night Curriculum

Gayle D. Haischer-Rollo*, James K. Aden, Candace S. Percival*, Caitlin M. Drumm*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: Following graduate medical education duty hour reform, many programs have migrated to a night float model to achieve duty hour compliance. This has led to increased focus on optimizing nighttime education. A 2018 internal program evaluation of the newborn night rotation revealed that most pediatric residents received no feedback and per-ceived little didactic education during their four-week, night float rotation. One hundred percent of resident respondents were interested in increased feedback, didactics, and procedural opportunities. Our objective was to develop a new-born night curriculum to ensure timely formative feedback, enhance trainee didactic experience, and guide formaleducation. Materials and Methods:A multimodal curriculum was designed to include senior resident-led, case-based scenarios, a pre- and post-test, a pre- and post-confidence assessment, a focused procedure "passport," weekly feedback sessions, and simulation cases. The San Antonio Uniformed Services Health Education Consortium implemented the curriculum starting from July2019. Results:Thirty-one trainees completed the curriculum in over 15months. There was a 100% pre- and post-test comple-tion rate. Test scores rose from an average of 69% to 94% (25% increase, P<.0001) for interns and an aver-age of 84% to 97% (13% increase, P<.0001) for third-year residents (PGY-3s). When averaged across domains assessed, intern confidence rose by 1.2 points and PGY-3 confidence rose by 0.7 points on a 5-point Likert scale. One hundred percent of trainees utilized the on-the-spot feedback form to initiate at least one in-person feedbacksession. Conclusions:As resident schedules evolve, there is an increased need for focused didactics during the night shift. The results and feedback from this resident-led and multimodal curriculum suggest that it is a valuable tool to improve knowledge and confidence for future pediatricians.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e3216-e3220
JournalMilitary Medicine
Volume188
Issue number9-10
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2023

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