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AEM Education and Training 05: Point of Care Resource Use in the ED: A Developmental Model

Welcome to the fifth episode of AEM Education and Training, a podcast collaboration between the Academic Emergency Medicine E&T Journal and Brown Emergency Medicine. Each quarter, we'll give you digital open access to AEM E&T Articles or Articles in Press, with an author interview podcast and links to curated supportive educational materials for EM learners and medical educators.

Find this podcast series on iTunes here.

DISCUSSING: (click on title for full text article)

Point of Care Resource Use in the ED: A Developmental Model. Catherine Patocka, MDCM, MHPE, Michelle Lin, MD, Jeremy Voros, MD, and Teresa Chan, MD, MHPE

LISTEN NOW: AUTHOR INTERVIEW WITH DR. CATHERINE PATOCKA

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Point of Care Resource Use in the ED: Dr. Rory Merritt and Dr. Catherine Patocka

 

ARTICLE ABSTRACT:

Background
Technologic advances, free open‐access medical education (FOAM or #FOAMed), and social media have increased access to clinician‐oriented medical education resources and interactions at the point of care (POC); yet, how, when, and why medical providers use these resources remains unclear. To facilitate the development and design of intuitive POC resources, it is imperative that we expand our understanding of physician knowledge‐seeking behavior at the POC.

Methods
Individual semistructured interviews were conducted and analyzed using a qualitative, grounded theory approach. Twelve emergency medicine providers (three medical students, three residents, and six attending physicians) were interviewed in person or via video chat to explore how POC resources are used in the emergency department (ED). A coding system was developed by two investigators and merged by consensus. A third investigator audited the analysis.

Results
A conceptual framework emerged from the data describing the four main uses of POC resources (deep‐dive, advanced clinical decision making, teaching patients, and teaching learners) and how practitioners’ main use varied based on medical expertise. Junior learners prioritize their own broad learning. Experienced learners and physicians prefer to 1) seek answers to specific focused clinical questions and 2) disseminate POC information to teach patients and learners, allowing them to devote more of their time to other clinical and teaching tasks.

Conclusion
The conceptual framework describes how physician knowledge‐seeking behavior using POC resources in the ED evolves predictably throughout training and practice. Knowledge of this evolution can be used to enhance POC resource design and guide bedside teaching strategies.

RESOURCES MENTIONED IN PODCASt:

a) Googlefoam.com: a FOAMed search engine

b) DrawMD (ios apps, website) for patient teaching

c) PediStat app by QxMD: bedside pediatric acute care reference

d) RxTx mobile (ios app) from the Canadian Pharmacists Association

e) OB Wheel app (multiple versions available)

f) ALiEM Cards (previously PV Cards)