Experiential Faculty Development to Increase the Number of Entrustable Professional Activity Assessments.

Clin Teach

Centre for Applied Health Sciences Education (CPASS), Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Published: February 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Emergency medicine residents faced challenges with receiving entrustable professional activity (EPA) assessments during their pediatric rotation due to untrained preceptors.
  • A study was conducted involving faculty members to evaluate the effectiveness of a training workshop focused on supervising EPAs.
  • Post-training results indicated an increase in EPA assessments for residents, suggesting that faculty development can enhance assessment opportunities in clinical rotations.

Article Abstract

Background: Emergency medicine (EM) residents must complete both adult and paediatric entrustable professional activities (EPAs). During their paediatric emergency medicine rotation at a university paediatric hospital, EM residents struggled to receive EPA assessments because preceptors had not yet been trained due to the stepwise implementation of EPAs. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of a workshop on behaviour change by measuring the number of EPA assessments.

Methods: A comparative pretraining and posttraining study involving 27 invited faculty members was conducted to assess the impact of a faculty development programme. The training was delivered via videoconference with experiential learning techniques to practise every aspect of the supervision of an EPA, including selecting the appropriate EPA according to mirroring real-world situations, giving feedback, evaluating autonomy and recording the EPA in the resident's logbook.

Results/findings: In total, 20 out of 27 eligible faculty members (74%) agreed to participate in the study. Their main challenges reported were a lack of trainee initiative, preceptor training and competence in supervising EPAs. Over the 12-month analysis period, the enrolled faculty assessed 125 EPAs for 38 EM residents, including 52 pre-intervention EPAs and 73 post-intervention EPAs. Calculation of data points above the median showed a 1-point difference in the EPAs assessments to resident ratio between the pre- and post-intervention periods (3/7 vs. 4/7).

Conclusion: Our findings suggest that faculty training using multiple educational strategies may enable EM residents to receive more EPA assessments during their paediatric emergency medicine rotation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tct.70006DOI Listing

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