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Formative Assessments Promote Procedural Learning and Engagement for Senior Pediatric Residents on Rotation in the Pediatric Emergency Department

Michael P. Goldman, Alexis V. Rudd, Sophie C. Baum, Madeline Nagler, Doria L. Weiss, Isabel T. Gross, Marc Auerbach

2022MedEdPORTAL10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Introduction: Procedural training is a universal concern amongst pediatric residents and their teachers. We developed and implemented formative assessments to generate direct and indirect procedural feedback. We analyzed changes in residents' perceived procedural knowledge, skills, confidence, and entrustment. Methods: Senior pediatric residents rotating in the pediatric emergency department participated in video-recorded formative assessments of informed consent OSCEs and simulated toddler forehead laceration repair and infant lumbar puncture. Residents reflected on their perceived procedural knowledge, skills, confidence, and entrustment through Likert and entrustment scales. Secondary outcomes of formative assessment completion rates and proportions of procedures performed by pediatric residents tracked feasibility and potential clinical impact, respectively. Results: = .05) performed by pediatric residents. Discussion: Integrating feasible procedural formative assessments into the pediatric emergency department rotation had a positive impact on senior pediatric residents' perceptions of their procedural knowledge, skills, confidence, and entrustment and was associated with increased procedural engagement.

Topics & Concepts

Formative assessmentMedicineEmergency departmentPediatric emergency medicineLikert scaleConfidence intervalFamily medicineEmergency medicineMedical educationNursingPsychologyInternal medicineDevelopmental psychologyPedagogyEmergency physicianInnovations in Medical EducationSimulation-Based Education in HealthcareClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills