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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Does Structured Quality Improvement Training For Residents Increase Qi In Practice?, Ivy A. Click, Jeri Ann Basden, Fred Tudiver
Does Structured Quality Improvement Training For Residents Increase Qi In Practice?, Ivy A. Click, Jeri Ann Basden, Fred Tudiver
ETSU Faculty Works
East Tennessee State University implemented quality improvement (QI) training for second-year family medicine residents in 2009. Results in 2011 indicated training increased scores in QI skill assessments as well as self-efficacy in QI. With residents who completed the training now in practice, does the increase in knowledge and skill translate to increased QI in practice? A survey of graduates compares frequency of QI cycles and self-assessment of QI skills among graduating classes, those receiving QI training and those graduating before training began. Residents that completed the QI curriculum rated their training higher; however residents that did not receive training were …
Focused Anticoagulation Service In Family Medicine Residencies, Ivy A. Click, Emily Flores, Leonard Brian Cross, Douglas Rose
Focused Anticoagulation Service In Family Medicine Residencies, Ivy A. Click, Emily Flores, Leonard Brian Cross, Douglas Rose
ETSU Faculty Works
A report on the creation of a new program to improve family medicine residents' understanding, and quality of care, of anticoagulation patients. Patients requiring anticoagulation therapy pose unique issues requiring a systematic approach to their care, balancing the potential benefit from therapy with possible adverse events. Here, we describe a model that helps to standardize both the care received by patients on anticoagulation therapy as well as the training of family medicine residents caring for those patients. A team-based model of care (family medicine residents, clinical pharmacists, and nurses) is used to achieve the goals of improved care and education. …