0
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      A case for lifelong learning in emergency medicine: The perspective from a rural state

      article-commentary

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          The expansive practice of emergency medicine cannot be fully taught or learned in 3 or 4 years. Lifelong learning, self‐assessment, 1 and ongoing skill acquisition and retention are necessary. How do we teach and acknowledge this during residency training and how do we support our isolated, rural colleagues? Importantly, there is a growing shortage of rural emergency physicians and many of our trainees may work in these environments. 2 As educators, we must study potential solutions and bridge these gaps for our trainees entering independent practice and for our colleagues far removed from formal training. Recent cases, and many like them, illustrate this point. A rural emergency physician expertly places a small‐bore chest tube for an atraumatic pneumothorax, the pneumothorax resolved, they requested transfer to a larger center for ongoing management. The tertiary care center is at full capacity. A phone consultation with a specialist recommends removal of the chest tube in the emergency department (ED) and discharge home if a follow up chest x‐ray shows sustained resolution. The emergency physician has never removed a chest tube before and the patient is transferred to a larger regional ED for uncomplicated removal. In a second case, a patient is transferred from an hour away, during a snowstorm, for a peritonsillar abscess. The procedure is within an emergency physician's scope of practice. The referring physician had never performed this procedure in their decades of practice. The patient is transferred to the tertiary care center where it is drained by the attending emergency physician and emergency medicine resident. On a winter night, an emergency physician intubates a patient with a head injury in their critical‐access emergency department. They request lifesaving medications and the respiratory therapist to set the ventilator. It is nighttime; there is no respiratory therapist or pharmacist. The physician must assist in mixing the medications and setting up the ventilator. The skills required for an emergency physician are ever expanding, particularly as access to tertiary care becomes more difficult. Lifelong learning and practice development to best serve our patients is a necessity in our specialty. Solutions may include regional conferences, collaborative case reviews, real‐time peer‐based decision support with telemedicine, maintenance of board certification, asynchronous, self‐directed learning through free open‐access medical education (FOAM), podcasts, textbooks or journal articles, and academic–rural partnerships that create shared faculty positions between rural and tertiary sites and rural rotations for trainees. Each of these has its limitations and time represents a major barrier. 3 , 4 , 5 The American Board of Emergency Medicine requires continuous learning for maintenance of certification; this is beneficial but is not tailored to the physician's practice environment. 6 , 7 Our own work in the rural state of Vermont and upstate New York has led us to offer high‐acuity, low occurrence (HALO) courses at the regional academic center twice a year for both residents and practicing emergency physicians within our region and create a rural‐specific simulation lab at one of our critical‐access sites. Additionally, we established a tele‐emergency medicine program to offer a virtual resource from the tertiary care center in times of high‐acuity, high‐complexity care, or volume surge. The skill of delivering and accepting tele‐emergency medicine assistance must also be learned and taught. Our education must continue to adapt to meet the needs of our unique and evolving practice environments. We must also acknowledge that many scenarios cannot be predicted. Instilling the motivation for lifelong learning, self‐assessment 1 and exposure to resource limited settings during training may help prepare trainees for these challenges. Although these issues are not unique to emergency medicine, we are a specialty that prides itself on adaptability. We must confront this challenge with creative solutions. AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS Skyler Lentz, Ashley Weisman, Jordan Ship, and Matthew S. Siket conceived the idea for this manuscript and contributed substantially to the content, design, writing and editing of the commentary. CONFLICT OF INTEREST STATEMENT The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

          Related collections

          Most cited references6

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: not found
          • Article: not found

          Self-assessment in lifelong learning and improving performance in practice: physician know thyself.

            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            National Study of the Emergency Physician Workforce, 2020

            We describe the current US emergency physician workforce.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: found
              Is Open Access

              Effectiveness of Telehealth in Rural and Remote Emergency Departments: Systematic Review

              Background Emergency telehealth has been used to improve access of patients residing in rural and remote areas to specialist care in the hope of mitigating the significant health disparities that they experience. Patient disposition decisions in rural and remote emergency departments (EDs) can be complex and largely dependent on the expertise and experience available at local (receiving-end) hospitals. Although there has been some synthesis of evidence of the effectiveness of emergency telehealth in clinical practice in rural and remote EDs for nonacute presentations, there has been limited evaluation of the influence of contextual factors such as clinical area and acuity of presentation on these findings. Objective The aims of this systematic review are to examine the outcome measures used in studying the effectiveness of telehealth in rural and remote EDs and to analyze the clinical context in which these outcome measures were used and interpreted. Methods The search strategy used Medical Subject Headings and equivalent lists of subject descriptors to find articles covering 4 key domains: telehealth or telemedicine, EDs, effectiveness, and rural and remote. Studies were selected using the Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcomes of Interest, and Study Design framework. This search strategy was applied to MEDLINE (Ovid), Cochrane Library, Scopus, CINAHL, ProQuest, and EconLit, as well as the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination databases (eg, National Health Service Economic Evaluation Database) for the search period from January 1, 1990, to May 23, 2020. Qualitative synthesis was performed on the outcome measures used in the included studies, in particular the clinical contexts within which they were interpreted. Results A total of 21 full-text articles were included for qualitative analysis. Telehealth use in rural and remote EDs demonstrated effectiveness in achieving improved or equivalent clinical effectiveness, appropriate care processes, and—depending on the context—improvement in speed of care, as well as favorable service use patterns. The definition of effectiveness varied across the clinical areas and contexts of the studies, and different measures have been used to affirm the safety and clinical effectiveness of telehealth in rural and remote EDs. The acuity of patient presentation emerged as a dominant consideration in the interpretation of interlinking time-sensitive clinical effectiveness and patient disposition measures such as transfer and discharge rates, local hospital admission, length of stay, and ED length of stay. These, together with clinical area and acuity of presentation, are the outcome determination criteria that emerged from this review. Conclusions Emergency telehealth studies typically use multiple outcome measures to determine the effectiveness of the services. The outcome determination criteria that emerged from this analysis are useful when defining the favorable direction for each outcome measure of interest. The findings of this review have implications for emergency telehealth service design and policies. Trial Registration PROSPERO CRD42019145903; https://tinyurl.com/ndmkr8ry
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                skylentz@gmail.com
                Journal
                AEM Educ Train
                AEM Educ Train
                10.1002/(ISSN)2472-5390
                AET2
                AEM Education and Training
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                2472-5390
                26 March 2023
                April 2023
                01 April 2023
                : 7
                : 2 ( doiID: 10.1002/aet2.v7.2 )
                : e10860
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Emergency Medicine The Robert Larner M.D. College of Medicine at The University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA
                [ 2 ] Elizabethtown Community Hospital Emergency Department Elizabethtown New York USA
                [ 3 ] Elizabethtown/Ticonderoga Community Hospital Emergency Departments Ticonderoga New York USA
                [ 4 ] UVM Emergency Medicine Residency Program Burlington Vermont USA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence

                Skyler Lentz, MD, Emergency Medicine, UVM Medical Center, 111 Colchester Ave, Burlington, VT 05401, USA.

                Email: skylentz@ 123456gmail.com

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1288-3261
                Article
                AET210860 AEMET-23-031
                10.1002/aet2.10860
                10041066
                36994317
                14c6a593-9997-4b34-b6eb-88fbb9057f5d
                © 2023 The Authors. AEM Education and Training published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 18 February 2023
                : 21 February 2023
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Pages: 2, Words: 1051
                Categories
                Commentary ‐ Unsolicited
                Commentary ‐ Unsolicited
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                April 2023
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:6.2.6 mode:remove_FC converted:27.03.2023

                emergency medicine education,lifelong learning,rural emergency medicine,self‐assessment,tele‐medicine

                Comments

                Comment on this article