4.6 Article

Resident Self-Assessment and Self-Reflection: University of Wisconsin-Madison's Five-Year Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 361-365

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-009-0904-1

Keywords

practice-based learning and improvement; graduate medical education; chart review; ambulatory care settings

Funding

  1. University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health
  2. Residency Review Committee for Internal Medicine
  3. University of Wisconsin Institute for Clinical and Translational Research
  4. NIH Clinical and Translational Science Award [1 UL1 RR025011]

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Chart review represents a critical cornerstone for practice-based learning and improvement in our internal medicine residency program. To document residents' performance monitoring and improvement skills in their continuity clinics, their satisfaction with practice-based learning and improvement, and their ability to self-reflect on their performance. Retrospective longitudinal design with repeated measures. Eighty Internal Medicine residents abstracted data for 3 consecutive years from the medical records of their 4,390 patients in the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW) Hospital and Clinics and William S. Middleton Veterans Administration (VA) outpatient clinics. Logistic modeling was used to determine the effect of postgraduate year, resident sex, graduation cohort, and clinic setting on residents' compliance rate on 17 nationally recognized health screening and chronic disease management parameters from 2003 to 2007. Residents' adherence to national preventive and chronic disease standards increased significantly from intern to subsequent years for administering immunizations, screening for diabetes, cholesterol, cancer, and behavioral risks, and for management of diabetes. Of the residents, 92% found the chart review exercise beneficial, with 63% reporting gains in understanding about their medical practices, 26% reflecting on specific gaps in their practices, and 8% taking critical action to improve their patient outcomes. This paper provides support for the feasibility and practicality of this limited-cost method of chart review. It also directs our residency program's attention in the continuity clinic to a key area important to internal medicine training programs by highlighting the potential benefit of enhancing residents' self-reflection skills.

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