Answering questions at the point of care: do residents practice EBM or manage information sources?

To determine the types of information sources that evidence-based medicine (EBM)-trained, family medicine residents use to answer clinical questions at the point of care, to assess whether the sources are evidence-based, and to provide suggestions for more effective information-management strategies...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic Medicine 2007-03, Vol.82 (3), p.298-303
Hauptverfasser: McCord, Gary, Smucker, William D, Selius, Brian A, Hannan, Scott, Davidson, Elliot, Schrop, Susan Labuda, Rao, Vinod, Albrecht, Paula
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 298
container_title Academic Medicine
container_volume 82
creator McCord, Gary
Smucker, William D
Selius, Brian A
Hannan, Scott
Davidson, Elliot
Schrop, Susan Labuda
Rao, Vinod
Albrecht, Paula
description To determine the types of information sources that evidence-based medicine (EBM)-trained, family medicine residents use to answer clinical questions at the point of care, to assess whether the sources are evidence-based, and to provide suggestions for more effective information-management strategies in residency training. In 2005, trained medical students directly observed (for two half-days per physician) how 25 third-year family medicine residents retrieved information to answer clinical questions arising at the point of care and documented the type and name of each source, the retrieval location, and the estimated time spent consulting the source. An end-of-study questionnaire asked 37 full-time faculty and the participating residents about the best information sources available, subscriptions owned, why they use a personal digital assistant (PDA) to practice medicine, and their experience in preventing medical errors using a PDA. Forty-four percent of questions were answered by attending physicians, 23% by consulting PDAs, and 20% from books. Seventy-two percent of questions were answered within two minutes. Residents rated UptoDate as the best source for evidence-based information, but they used this source only five times. PDAs were used because of ease of use, time factors, and accessibility. All examples of medical errors discovered or prevented with PDA programs were medication related. None of the participants' residencies required the use of a specific medical information resource. The results support the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality's call for medical system improvements at the point of care. Additionally, it may be necessary to teach residents better information-management skills in addition to EBM skills.
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid LWW Legacy Archive; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Computers, Handheld - utilization
Databases, Bibliographic - utilization
Evidence-Based Medicine
Family Practice - education
Humans
Information Storage and Retrieval - statistics & numerical data
Internship and Residency
Ohio
Point-of-Care Systems
Surveys and Questionnaires
Textbooks as Topic
title Answering questions at the point of care: do residents practice EBM or manage information sources?
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