Viewpoint: Evidence-guided education: Patients' outcome data should influence our teaching priorities

被引:29
作者
Glick, TH
机构
[1] Cambridge Hlth Alliance, Dept Med, Cambridge, MA USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurol, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00001888-200502000-00008
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
How should medical educators choose learning objectives and teaching content in clinical education? Given the information chain reaction, coverage of all significant topics in sufficient depth is not possible. Choosing subjects of high priority is essential if education is to have maximum impact on quality of care. These priorities should not derive from tradition and opinion, but should be informed by patient outcomes, the ultimate standard for assessing educational effectiveness. Building upon prior initiatives linking education to practice, the author uses the term "evidence-guided education" to express the process of influencing curricular choices with evidence from health outcomes. Sources of outcome evidence include incident reports, morbidity and mortality conferences, surveillance of quality of care in particular venues, case series, surveys of adverse events and "nearmisses," and malpractice claims. Starting with anecdotal occurrences, additional case-finding may establish patterns of poor outcomes, some of which may be preventable. Credible research data on outcomes can inform prioritization for objectives and content at successive institutional levels, which should improve practices and outcomes, completing the loop of feedback, implementation, and improved health. The closer the educational intervention is to practice, the more accountable it becomes. Thus, EGE is more amenable to evaluation at residents' and practitioners' levels and more difficult at the undergraduate level. However, outcome evidence should still inform undergraduate teaching, since this constitutes the platform for future learning. Severe constraints on learning time mandate prioritization of content and suggest the need for the judicious application of outcome evidence in place of mere opinion.
引用
收藏
页码:147 / 151
页数:5
相关论文
共 18 条
[1]  
*ACCR COUNC GRAD M, OUTC PROJ ACGME GEN
[2]  
Anderson MB, 1999, ACAD MED, V74, P13
[3]   Spinal cord emergencies: False reassurance from reflexes [J].
Blick, TH ;
Workman, TP ;
Gaufberg, SV .
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 1998, 5 (10) :1041-1043
[4]   INCIDENCE OF ADVERSE EVENTS AND NEGLIGENCE IN HOSPITALIZED-PATIENTS - RESULTS OF THE HARVARD MEDICAL-PRACTICE STUDY-I [J].
BRENNAN, TA ;
LEAPE, LL ;
LAIRD, NM ;
HEBERT, L ;
LOCALIO, AR ;
LAWTHERS, AG ;
NEWHOUSE, JP ;
WEILER, PC ;
HIATT, HH .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1991, 324 (06) :370-376
[5]  
BROWN CR, 1971, NEW ENGL J MED S, V284, P88
[6]   How much neurology should a medical student learn? A position statement of the AAN Undergraduate Education Subcommittee [J].
Charles, PD ;
Scherokman, B ;
Jozefowicz, RF .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 1999, 74 (01) :23-26
[7]   Leadership for medicine's promising future [J].
Cohen, JJ .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 1998, 73 (02) :132-137
[8]   Medical errors on an inpatient neurology service [J].
Frank, S ;
Holloway, R .
NEUROLOGY, 2003, 61 (02) :254-257
[9]  
Fridriksson S, 2001, ACTA NEUROL SCAND, V103, P238
[10]  
Glick TH, 2004, J FAM PRACTICE, V53, P197