Are internal medicine residents meeting the bar? : comparing resident knowledge and self-efficacy to published palliative care competencies

Article indépendant

MOYER, Kristen M. | ELLMAN, Matthew S. | ENCANDELA, John | MORRISON, Laura J.

BACKGROUND: There is a need for improved primary palliative care (PC) education and resident comfort with providing end-of-life care. OBJECTIVE: Utilize a new instrument derived from published PC competencies to assess baseline Internal Medicine (IM) resident knowledge and self-efficacy in PC to identify educational gaps and create new PC curricula. DESIGN: We created a 2-part instrument including a Knowledge Test (KT) and a Self-Efficacy Inventory (SEI) addressing 18 PC resident competencies across 5 domains: Pain and Symptom Management (PSM), Communication (COMM), Psychosocial, Spiritual, and Cultural Aspects of Care (PSC), Terminal Care and Bereavement (TCB), and Palliative Care Principles and Practice (PCPP). SETTING/SUBJECTS: The instrument was emailed to IM residents at our institution during academic years 2015-2016 and 2016-2017. MEASUREMENTS: Basic descriptive statistics were performed for the KT and SEI. Mean Rank Analysis and One-way ANOVA were utilized for the KT and SEI, respectively. Congruence was calculated between knowledge and self-efficacy. RESULTS: The mean score on the KT was 73% (range 33-80%). There was no significant difference in knowledge among post-graduate year cohorts. Self-efficacy scores were lower for interns overall and in PCPP, TCB, and COMM domains. Knowledge was concordant with self-efficacy in 42% of participants, higher than self-efficacy in 10% of participants, and lower than self-efficacy in 48% of participants. CONCLUSIONS: For approximately half of respondents, high self-efficacy in PC did not correlate with high PC knowledge. A more focused curriculum is needed to help IM residents facilitate mastery of PC competencies by graduation.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049909120954807

Voir la revue «The American journal of hospice and palliative care, 38»

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