A Measure of the Impact on Real-Time Patient Care of Evidence-based Medicine Logs
Jeffrey B. Brown, Ajay K. Varadhan, Jacob R. Albers, Shreyas Kudrimoti, Estelle Cervantes, Phillip Sgobba, Dawn M. Yenser, Bryan G. Kane

TL;DR
This study shows how tracking evidence-based medicine activities in resident logs can improve real-time patient care and future medical practices.
Contribution
The study introduces a method to quantify how evidence-based medicine impacts real-time patient care through practice-based learning logs.
Findings
18.7% of logs indicated evidence would affect future patient care.
3.7% of logs showed real-time changes in patient care in the ED.
Abstract
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is a critical skill for physicians, and EBM competency has been shown to increase implementation of best medical practices, reduce medical errors, and increase patient-centered care. Like any skill, EBM must be practiced, receiving iterative feedback to improve learners’ comprehension. Having residents document patient interactions in logbooks to allow for residency program review, feedback, and documentation of competency has been previously described as a best practice within emergency medicine (EM) to document practice-based learning (PBL) competency. Quantifying how residents use the information they query, locate, evaluate, and apply while providing direct patient care can measure the efficacy of EBM education and provide insight into more efficient ways of providing medical care. Practice-based learning logs were surveys created to record resident…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Sciences Research and Education · Radiology practices and education · Innovations in Medical Education
