Resident Remediation in Family Medicine Residency Programs: A CERA Survey of Program Directors

Background and Objectives: Identifying underperforming residents and helping them become fully competent physicians is an important faculty responsibility. The process to identify and remediate these learners varies greatly between programs. The objective of this study was to evaluate the remediatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Family medicine 2021-10, Vol.53 (9), p.773-778
Hauptverfasser: Frazier, Winfred, Wilson, Stephen A., D'Amico, Frank, Bergus, George R.
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container_end_page 778
container_issue 9
container_start_page 773
container_title Family medicine
container_volume 53
creator Frazier, Winfred
Wilson, Stephen A.
D'Amico, Frank
Bergus, George R.
description Background and Objectives: Identifying underperforming residents and helping them become fully competent physicians is an important faculty responsibility. The process to identify and remediate these learners varies greatly between programs. The objective of this study was to evaluate the remediation landscape in family medicine residency programs by investigating resident remediation characteristics, tools to improve the process, and remediation challenges. Methods: This study analyzed responses from the Council of Academic Family Medicine Educational Research Alliance (CERA) national survey of family medicine program directors in 2017. Survey questions included topics on faculty remediation training, remediation prevalence, tools for remediation, and barriers to remediation. Results: Two hundred sixty-seven of 503 program directors completed our survey (53% response rate). Most residency programs (245/264, 93%) had at least one resident undergoing remediation in the last 3 years. A majority (242/265, 91%) of residents undergoing remediation were successful within 12 months. The three most important tools to improve remediation were an accessible remediation toolkit (50%), formal remediation recommendations from national family medicine organizations (20%), and on-site faculty development and training (19%). The top-two challenges to the remediation process were a lack of documented evaluations to trigger remediation and a lack of faculty knowledge and skills with effective remediation strategies. Conclusions: Residents needing remediation are common, but most were successfully remediated within 12 months. Program directors wanted access to a standardized toolkit to help guide the remediation process.
doi_str_mv 10.22454/FamMed.2021.546572
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The three most important tools to improve remediation were an accessible remediation toolkit (50%), formal remediation recommendations from national family medicine organizations (20%), and on-site faculty development and training (19%). The top-two challenges to the remediation process were a lack of documented evaluations to trigger remediation and a lack of faculty knowledge and skills with effective remediation strategies. Conclusions: Residents needing remediation are common, but most were successfully remediated within 12 months. 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title Resident Remediation in Family Medicine Residency Programs: A CERA Survey of Program Directors
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