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Resident identification of feedback and teaching on rounds.

Madeleine I MatthiesenKeith BakerJo ShapiroYuchiao ChangTrent D BuskirkDouglas E Wright
Published in: Proceedings (Baylor University. Medical Center) (2019)
Feedback and teaching occur regularly on teaching hospital wards. Although feedback has important implications for resident learning, residents often report that they receive little feedback. The significant overlap of teaching and feedback in clinical education may contribute to resident difficulty with feedback identification. We sent a survey with seven scenarios to internal medicine residents across the country. Two of the scenarios contained teaching, two contained feedback, and three contained combined teaching and feedback. From October 2017 to April 2018, 17% of residents (392/2346) from 17 residency programs completed the survey. Participating residents correctly identified both feedback scenarios 89% of the time, both teaching scenarios 64% of the time, and all three combined teaching and feedback scenarios 38% of the time. Interns were less likely than upper-level residents to correctly identify combined teaching and feedback scenarios (P = 0.005). Residents may have difficulty identifying feedback in the context of teaching. This confusion may contribute to residents' perceptions that they receive little feedback.
Keyphrases
  • medical students
  • climate change
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • public health