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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 6/2018

01-06-2018 | Innovation and Improvement: Innovations in Medical Education

Asking a Variety of Questions on Walk Rounds: a Pilot Study

Authors: Helen M. Shields, M.D, Stephen R. Pelletier, Ph.D, Christopher L. Roy, M.D, James P. Honan, Ed. D

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 6/2018

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Abstract

Background

Morning walk rounds have lost some of their engagement while remaining a useful and valued practice.

Aim

We created a pilot study to evaluate the impact on rounds of learning to asking a variety of different questions.

Setting

One-hour intervention sessions were voluntarily offered to members of the Department of Medicine and taught by an expert in the question, listen, and respond method.

Participants

Participants included attendings and residents in Internal Medicine on medical teams.

Program Description

Questionnaires were collected on six pre-intervention and six post-intervention days. Nine months later, an anonymous online survey was sent to participants asking about their use of a wider variety of questions.

Program Evaluation

Two hundred eight physicians (residents 175 (45.5%), attending physicians 25 (27.7%)) filled out pre-intervention surveys. One hundred eighty-one physicians (residents 155 (40.3%), attending physicians 18 (20%)) filled out post-intervention surveys. When survey responses from the attendings and residents on the medical teams were combined, post-intervention rounds were perceived as more worthwhile (1.99 pre-intervention and 1.55 post-intervention, [95% confidence interval 1.831–2.143]) (p < 0.001) and more engaging (1.68 pre-intervention and 1.30 post-intervention, [95% confidence interval 1.407–1.688]) (p < 0.001).Non-medical teams’ survey responses did not change. Patient census data indicated no significant difference in the hospital’s census on the pre- and post-intervention dates. Spontaneous suggestions for improving rounds came largely from the residents and included teaching points, clinical pearls, patient focus, more interactive, increased dedicated time for teaching, inclusive/multidisciplinary, questions, and evidence-based teaching. Of the participants who answered the online survey 9 months later, 75% (6/8) reported that they “actually asked a wider variety of types of questions.”

Discussion

This pilot study indicates that the 1-h intervention of learning to ask a variety of different questions is associated with rounds that are rated as more worthwhile and engaging by the medical teams.
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Metadata
Title
Asking a Variety of Questions on Walk Rounds: a Pilot Study
Authors
Helen M. Shields, M.D
Stephen R. Pelletier, Ph.D
Christopher L. Roy, M.D
James P. Honan, Ed. D
Publication date
01-06-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 6/2018
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-018-4381-2

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