| Publication Type | pre-print |
| School or College | School of Medicine |
| Department | Surgery |
| Creator | Madsen, Troy Edward |
| Other Author | Fix, Megan L.; Enslow, Michael S.; Blankenship, Jay F.; Horne, Benjamin D.; Stroud, Susan K.; Barton, Erik D.; Davis, Virgil |
| Title | Emergency medicine resident anesthesia training in a private vs. academic setting |
| Date | 2012-01-01 |
| Description | Airway management is an essential part of any Emergency Medicine (EM) training program. Academic centers typically provide training to many learners at various training levels in a number of medical specialties during anesthesiology rotations. This potentially creates competition for intubation procedures that may negatively impact individual experiences. Objectives: We hypothesized that residents would report higher numbers of intubations and improved educational value in a private practice, rather than an academic, anesthesiology rotation. Methods: EM residents' anesthesiology training was evaluated pre and post a change in training setting from an academic institution to a private practice institution. Outcome measures included the number of self-reported intubations, resident ratings of the rotation, and the number of positive comments. Residents' evaluation was measured with: a 14-item evaluation; subjective comments, which two blinded reviewers rated as positive, negative, or neutral; and transcripts from structured interviews to identify themes related to training settings. Results: The number of intubations increased significantly in the private practice setting (4.6 intubations/day vs. 1.5 intubations/day, p < 0.001). Resident evaluations improved significantly with the private practice experience (mean scores of 3.83 vs. 2.23, p-values <0.05). Residents' impressions were also significantly higher for the private practice setting with respect to increased educational value, greater use of adjunct airway devices, and directed teaching. Conclusions: Number of intubations performed and residents' rating of the educational value were more favorable for a private practice anesthesiology rotation. Alternative settings may provide benefit for training in areas that have competition among trainees. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | Elsevier |
| First Page | 1 |
| Last Page | 6 |
| Language | eng |
| Bibliographic Citation | Fix, M. L., Enslow, M. S., Blankenship, J. F., Horne, B. D., Stroud, S. K., Madsen, T. E., Barton, E.D., & Davis, V. (2012). Emergency medicine resident anesthesia training in a private vs. academic setting. Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1-6. |
| Rights Management | © Elsevier ; Authors pre-print from Fix, M. L., Enslow, M. S., Blankenship, J. F., Horne, B. D., Stroud, S. K., Madsen, T. E., Barton, E.D., & Davis, V. |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 598,320 bytes |
| Identifier | uspace,18035 |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6j39bc0 |
| Setname | ir_uspace |
| ID | 708324 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6j39bc0 |