Purpose: Determine the prevalence of medical students in OBGYN
resident continuity clinics and describe effects on the learning environment
when students and residents work together in this setting.
Background: Patient continuity is an ACGME requirement often
fulfilled through a resident run continuity clinic. It’s unknown how frequently
students rotate in these clinics, or how multiple levels of learners influence
each other.
Methods: We surveyed OBGYN program managers using a national
listserv. Resident and student surveys were based on a Likert scale and sent to
all OBGYN residents and students that rotated at our institution from
2016-2018.
Results: Program managers responded from 45 programs and 75.6%
scheduled students in resident continuity clinics. Our response rates were
79/116(68.1%) for students and 21/24(87.5%) for residents. A one-sample
Wilcoxon signed rank test was used to test the hypothesis that the typical
response on the five-level Likert scale was \\\"Agree\\\" or \\\"Strongly
Agree.\\\" Of medical students, 88.6% stated that they agreed or strongly
agreed they enjoyed working with residents (p<0.001) and 60.8% stated
they agreed or strongly agreed residents were effective teachers (p<0.001).
Among residents, 52.4% agreed or strongly agreed that they enjoyed working with
students (p<0.001). However, 61.9% said they agreed or strongly agreed they
were too busy to be effective teachers (p<0.001).
Discussions: Many institutions have students rotate in resident continuity
clinics. Residents and students have positive views regarding their
interactions. Although students were satisfied, residents expressed concerns
about their ability to be effective teachers given clinical demands. Our
results highlight the importance of developing resident teaching skills.
Topics: CREOG & APGO Annual Meeting, 2019, Student, Resident, Faculty, Clerkship Director, Clerkship Coordinator, Residency Director, Residency Coordinator, Patient Care, Medical Knowledge, Systems-Based Practice & Improvement, Practice-Based Learning & Improvement, GME, CME, UME, Assessment, Problem-Based Learning, Team-Based Learning, General Ob-Gyn,
Tina Chaalan,
MD, St
Joseph Mercy Hosptial; Deborah Landis-Lewis, MD;
Kelly O\\\'\\\'Connor,
MD; Bryan
Popp, MD;
Maya Hammoud,
MD, MBA; Erika
Mowers, MD