A Comparison of National Pediatric Procedures Training Guidelines With Actual Clinical Practice in Ohio

The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and Pediatrics Review Committee (RC) recommends the clinical procedures residents should master during their training. These guidelines may be partially based on consensus opinion or tradition rather than actual need. The literature de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of graduate medical education 2019-04, Vol.11 (2), p.159-167
Hauptverfasser: Iyer, Maya S, Way, David P, Kline, Jennifer, Wallihan, Rebecca, Stanley, Rachel M
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container_title Journal of graduate medical education
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creator Iyer, Maya S
Way, David P
Kline, Jennifer
Wallihan, Rebecca
Stanley, Rachel M
description The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and Pediatrics Review Committee (RC) recommends the clinical procedures residents should master during their training. These guidelines may be partially based on consensus opinion or tradition rather than actual need. The literature defining which procedures general pediatricians actually perform in practice is limited. Our objective was to determine how often general pediatricians perform procedures recommended by accreditation bodies, how well prepared they feel to perform them, and how important the procedures are to their practice. We categorized recommended procedures as emergent, urgent, or office-based, then developed and administered a survey in 2017 based on these classes. We randomly sampled and polled 439 general pediatricians from urban, suburban, or rural regions across central Ohio. Responses were compared using the Welch ANOVA, Mann Whitney U, and post-hoc tests. The response rate was 60% (265 of 439). Pediatricians almost never performed 11 of 13 recommended procedures, yet felt well prepared to perform them all and believed that all were important. Rural pediatricians performed significantly more emergent and office-based procedures and rated them as more important. Commonly performed non-ACGME/RC procedures were circumcision, wart removal, cerumen removal, umbilical cauterization, and suture removal. Findings suggest that pediatricians rarely perform most of the recommended procedures, but think they are important. There are several office-based non-ACGME recommended procedures that pediatricians commonly perform. Regional differences suggest the need for customized training based on future practice plans.
doi_str_mv 10.4300/JGME-D-18-00746.1
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Rural pediatricians performed significantly more emergent and office-based procedures and rated them as more important. Commonly performed non-ACGME/RC procedures were circumcision, wart removal, cerumen removal, umbilical cauterization, and suture removal. Findings suggest that pediatricians rarely perform most of the recommended procedures, but think they are important. There are several office-based non-ACGME recommended procedures that pediatricians commonly perform. 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Rural pediatricians performed significantly more emergent and office-based procedures and rated them as more important. Commonly performed non-ACGME/RC procedures were circumcision, wart removal, cerumen removal, umbilical cauterization, and suture removal. Findings suggest that pediatricians rarely perform most of the recommended procedures, but think they are important. There are several office-based non-ACGME recommended procedures that pediatricians commonly perform. 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subjects Clinical Competence - standards
Clinical Competence - statistics & numerical data
Education, Medical, Graduate - standards
Female
Guidelines as Topic
Humans
Internship and Residency - standards
Male
Ohio
Original Research
Pediatricians - statistics & numerical data
Pediatrics - methods
Surveys and Questionnaires
title A Comparison of National Pediatric Procedures Training Guidelines With Actual Clinical Practice in Ohio
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