Quality improvement (QI) is part of the future of medicine. However, QI concepts are often poorly understood by physicians. Although teaching QI is required in resident training, an effective QI curriculum is difficult to design due to competing demands from clinic schedules and required rotations. The objective of this project was to teach family medicine residents the basic concepts of QI and practical implementation skills based on use of a clinic population, electronic medical record (EMR) system, and Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. To do this, the Family Medicine residents and faculty at the University of Hawai`i participated in a QI curriculum to improve diabetes care from October 2018 to February 2019 with 5 sessions consisting of lectures, videos, discussions about QI data for diabetes patients, and group activities. Residents and faculty used quality measures pulled from the EMR and PDSA cycles to discuss, select, and implement QI projects for diabetes patients. Pre- and post-tests measured participants' baseline and end QI knowledge and skills. All 18 residents and 12 faculty in the program participated in the curriculum. The pre- and post-test comparisons showed significant improvement in knowledge of QI concepts and the comfort level among residents showing a 59% average improvement in knowledge questions and a 57% average improvement in comfort level in implementing a QI project (Table 4). This study shows that a 5-session QI curriculum based on EMR and PDSA cycles successfully increased family medicine residents' and faculty's knowledge of QI concepts and skills.
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