Treffer: The design, fate and impact of a hospital-wide training program in evidence-based medicine for physicians : An observational study

Title:
The design, fate and impact of a hospital-wide training program in evidence-based medicine for physicians : An observational study
Publisher Information:
Högskolan i Jönköping, The Jönköping Academy for Improvement of Health and Welfare
Karolinska institutet
Publication Year:
2016
Collection:
Jönköping Univ.: Publications
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift article in journal/newspaper
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
English
Relation:
BMC Medical Education, 2016, 16; PMID 26956890; ISI:000371765100001
DOI:
10.1186/s12909-016-0601-9
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number:
edsbas.D1171646
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

Background: Many doctors fail to practice Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) effectively, in part due to insufficient training. We report on the design, fate and impact of a short learner-centered EBM train-the-trainer program aimed at all 2400 doctors at the Karolinska University Hospital in Sweden on the heels of a tumultuous merger, focusing particularly on whether it affected the doctors' knowledge, attitudes and skills regarding EBM. Methods: We used a validated EBM instrument in a before-and-after design to assess the impact of the training. Changes in responses were analyzed at the individual level using the Wilcoxon matched pairs test. We also reviewed documentation from the program - including the modular EBM training schedule and the template for participants' Critically Appraised Topic reports - to describe the training's content, design, conduct, and fate. Results: The training, designed to be delivered in modules of 45 min totaling 1.5 days, failed to reach most doctors at the hospital, due to cost cutting pressures and competing demands. Among study participants (n = 174), many reported suboptimal EBM knowledge and skills before the training. Respondents' strategies for solving clinical problems changed after the training: the proportion of respondents reporting to use (or intend to use) secondary sources "Often/very often" changed from 5 % before the training to 76 % after the training; in parallel, reliance on textbooks and on colleagues fell (48 to 23 % and 79 to 65 %, respectively). Participants' confidence in assessing scientific articles increased and their attitudes toward EBM became more positive. The proportion of correct answers in the EBM knowledge test increased from 52 to 71 %. All these changes were statistically significant at p < 0.05. Conclusions: Many study participants, despite working at a university hospital, lacked basic EBM knowledge and skills and used the scientific literature suboptimally. The kind of short learner-centered EBM training evaluated here brought significant ...