AI Article Synopsis

  • A survey of emergency medicine program directors revealed that most believe boarding patients in the emergency department negatively impacts resident education, with 80% noting significant adverse effects.
  • Respondents cited specific areas of concern, such as reduced involvement in patient management and bedside teaching, though some observed a potential positive impact on learning about critically ill patients.
  • The study emphasizes the need for strategies to address these educational challenges and enhance residents' training experiences despite the pressures of high patient volumes and departmental flow.

Article Abstract

Background: Boarding patients in the emergency department (ED) potentially affects resident education. Program director (PD) perceptions of the impact of boarding on their trainees have not been previously described.

Methods: We surveyed a cross-sectional convenience sample of emergency medicine PDs using a mixed-methods approach to explore their perceptions of how boarding has affected their residents' training. Descriptive data were reported as percentages and differences were calculated using Pearson's chi-square test, with  < 0.05 considered significant. A framework model was used to qualitatively analyze free-text responses.

Results: A total of 170 responses were collected, for a response rate of 63%. Most respondents felt that boarding had at least some effect on resident education with 29%, 35%, 18%, and 12% noting "a little," "a moderate amount," "a lot," and "a great deal," respectively, and 5% noting "no effect at all." Respondents perceived a negative impact of boarding on resident education and training, with 80% reporting a "somewhat" or "extremely negative" effect, 18% feeling neutral, and 2% noting a "somewhat positive" effect. Most noted a "somewhat" or "extremely negative" effect on resident education in managing ED throughput (70%) and high patient volumes (66%). Fifty-four percent noted a "somewhat" or "extremely negative" impact on being involved in the initial workup of undifferentiated patients. Thirty-two percent saw a "somewhat" or "extremely positive" effect on learning the management of critically ill patients. Qualitative analysis of challenges, mitigation strategies, and resident feedback emphasized the lack of exposure to managing departmental patient flow, impact on bedside teaching, and need for flexibility in resident staffing.

Conclusions: Most PDs agree that boarding negatively affects resident education and identify several strategies to mitigate the impact. These findings can help inform future interventions to optimize resident learning in the complex educational landscape of high ED boarding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11018641PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aet2.10973DOI Listing

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