Peer Learning Program Metrics: A Pediatric Neuroradiology Example

The American College of Radiology is now offering an accreditation pathway for programs that use peer learning. Here, we share feasibility and outcome data from a pilot peer learning program in a pediatric neuroradiology section that, in its design, follows the American College of Radiology peer lea...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of neuroradiology : AJNR 2022-11, Vol.43 (11), p.1680-1684
Hauptverfasser: Kadom, N, Reddy, K M, Khanna, G, Simoneaux, S F, Allen, J W, Heilbrun, M E
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container_end_page 1684
container_issue 11
container_start_page 1680
container_title American journal of neuroradiology : AJNR
container_volume 43
creator Kadom, N
Reddy, K M
Khanna, G
Simoneaux, S F
Allen, J W
Heilbrun, M E
description The American College of Radiology is now offering an accreditation pathway for programs that use peer learning. Here, we share feasibility and outcome data from a pilot peer learning program in a pediatric neuroradiology section that, in its design, follows the American College of Radiology peer learning accreditation pathway criteria. We retrospectively reviewed metrics from a peer learning program with 5 participating full-time pediatric neuroradiologists during 1 year: 1) number of cases submitted, 2) percentage of radiologists meeting targets, 3) monthly attendance, 4) number of cases reviewed, 5) learning points, and 6) improvement actions. In addition, a faculty survey was conducted and is reported here. Three hundred twenty-four cases were submitted (mean, 7 cases/faculty/month). The faculty never met the monthly submission target. Peer learning meeting attendance was 100%. One hundred seventy-nine cases were reviewed during the peer learning meetings. There were 22 learning points throughout the year and 30 documented improvement actions. The faculty survey yielded the highest ratings (4.8 of 5) for ease of meeting the 100% attendance requirement and for the learning value of the peer learning sessions. The lowest rating (4.2 of 5) was given for the effectiveness of improvements as a result of peer learning discussions. Implementing a peer learning program that follows the American College of Radiology peer learning accreditation pathway criteria is feasible. Program metric documentation can be time-consuming. Participant feedback led to meaningful program improvement, such as improving trust, expanding case submission categories, and delegating tasks to administrative staff. Effort to make peer learning operations more efficient and more effective is underway.
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Accreditation
Benchmarking
Child
Humans
Pediatrics
Radiologists
Retrospective Studies
title Peer Learning Program Metrics: A Pediatric Neuroradiology Example
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