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Academic Emergency Medicine | 2010

Duty hours in emergency medicine: Balancing patient safety, resident wellness, and the resident training experience: A consensus response to the 2008 institute of medicine resident duty hours recommendations

Mary Jo Wagner; Stephen Wolf; Susan B. Promes; Doug McGee; Cheri Hobgood; Christopher Doty; Mara McErlean; Alan Janssen; Rebecca Smith-Coggins; Louis Ling; Amal Mattu; Stephen S. Tantama; Michael S. Beeson; Thomas Brabson; Greg Christiansen; Brent King; Emily Luerssen; R. Muelleman

Representatives of emergency medicine (EM) were asked to develop a consensus report that provided a review of the past and potential future effects of duty hour requirements for EM residency training. In addition to the restrictions made in 2003 by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), the potential effects of the 2008 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report on resident duty hours were postulated. The elements highlighted include patient safety, resident wellness, and the resident training experience. Many of the changes and recommendations did not affect EM as significantly as other specialties. Current training standards in EM have already emphasized patient safety by requiring continuous on-site supervision of residents. Resident fatigue has been addressed with restrictions of shift lengths and limitation of consecutive days worked. One recommendation from the IOM was a required 5-hour rest period for residents on call. Emergency department (ED) patient safety becomes an important concern with the decrease in the availability and in the patient load of a resident consultant that may result from this recommendation. Of greater concern is the already observed slower throughput time for admitted patients waiting for resident care, which will increase ED crowding and decrease patient safety in academic institutions. A balance between being overly prescriptive with duty hour restrictions and trying to improve resident wellness was recommended. Discussion is included regarding the appropriate length of EM training programs if clinical experiences were limited by new duty hour regulations. Finally, this report presents a review of the financing issues associated with any changes.


Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation | 2005

Ionized magnesium levels and the ratio of ionized calcium to magnesium in asthma patients before and after treatment with magnesium

Richard Sinert; Mark Spektor; Andrew Gorlin; Christopher Doty; Adam Rubin; Bella T. Altura; Burton M. Altura

Objective. Prior studies have been equivocal about the efficacy of magnesium therapy in acute asthma exacerbations. We hypothesize that pretreatment ionized magnesium (Mg2+) levels and/or the ratio of ionized calcium to ionized magnesium (Ca2+/Mg2+) may have been confounding variables in these previous studies. Here, we report on the incidence of abnormal divalent ion levels in our asthma population. Material and methods. The study was designed as a randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial of intravenous magnesium. Inclusion criteria were: age >18 years, percentage predicted forced expiratory volume (FEV1) <75 % after an initial beta‐agonist. African–American patients (AA) at an urban university hospital were randomized to 2 g IV Mg or placebo. Mg2+ and Ca2+/Mg2+ levels were measured pre‐ and post‐infusion. Data were reported as means±SD. Students t‐test and Fishers exact test were used where appropriate (α = 0.05, two tailed) Results. Fifty‐five AA patients (mean age of 42.7 years±15.6 years, range18–75 years) were studied. A significantly (p<0.05) lower level of Mg2+ was found in asthma (AS) patients compared with that in the AA group, by 0.03 mmol/L (95 % CI, 0.007–0.053 mmol/L). The AS group had a mean increase in Ca2+/Mg2+ ratios over the AA group, of 0.27 (95 % CI, 0.16–0.38); 100 % of patients with abnormal divalent ion levels were corrected with IV magnesium. Conclusions. We identified a subgroup of asthmatic patients with significant abnormalities in their divalent ion concentrations, which was corrected with IV magnesium.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2010

Duty Hours in Emergency Medicine: Balancing Patient Safety, Resident Wellness, and the Resident Training Experience: A Consensus Response to the 2008 Institute of Medicine Resident Duty Hours Recommendations

Mary Jo Wagner; Stephen Wolf; Susan B. Promes; Doug McGee; Cheri Hobgood; Christopher Doty; Mara McErlean; Alan Janssen; Rebecca Smith-Coggins; Louis Ling; Amal Mattu; Stephen S. Tantama; Michael S. Beeson; Thomas Brabson; Greg Christiansen; Brent King; Emily Luerssen; R. Muelleman

BACKGROUND Representatives of emergency medicine (EM) were asked to develop a consensus report that provided a review of the past and potential future effects of duty hour requirements for EM residency training. In addition to the restrictions made in 2003 by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the potential effects of the 2008 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report on resident duty hours were postulated. DISCUSSION The elements highlighted include patient safety, resident wellness, and the resident training experience. Many of the changes and recommendations did not affect EM as significantly as other specialties. Current training standards in EM have already emphasized patient safety by requiring continuous onsite supervision of residents. Resident fatigue has been addressed with restrictions of shift lengths and limitation of consecutive days worked. CONCLUSION One recommendation from the IOM was a required 5-h rest period for residents on call. Emergency department (ED) patient safety becomes an important concern with the decrease in the availability and in the patient load of a resident consultant that may result from this recommendation. Of greater concern is the already observed slower throughput time for admitted patients waiting for resident care, which will increase ED crowding and decrease patient safety in academic institutions. A balance between being overly prescriptive with duty hour restrictions and trying to improve resident wellness was recommended. Discussion is included regarding the appropriate length of EM training programs if clinical experiences were limited by new duty hour regulations. Finally, this report presents a review of the financing issues associated with any changes.


Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2018

Does the Podcast Video Playback Speed Affect Comprehension for Novel Curriculum Delivery? A Randomized Trial

Kristine Song; Amit Chakraborty; Matthew Dawson; Adam Dugan; Brian Adkins; Christopher Doty

Introduction Medical education is a rapidly evolving field that has been using new technology to improve how medical students learn. One of the recent implementations in medical education is the recording of lectures for the purpose of playback at various speeds. Though previous studies done via surveys have shown a subjective increase in the rate of knowledge acquisition when learning from sped-up lectures, no quantitative studies have measured information retention. The purpose of this study was to compare mean test scores on written assessments to objectively determine if watching a video of a recorded lecture at 1.5× speed was significantly different than 1.0× speed for the immediate retention of novel material. Methods Fifty-four University of Kentucky medical students volunteered to participate in this study. The subjects were divided into two separate groups: Group A and Group B. Each group watched two separate videos, the first at 1.5× speed and the second at 1.0× speed, then completed assessments following each. The topics of the two videos were ultrasonography artifacts and transducers. Group A watched the artifacts video first at 1.5× speed followed by the transducers video at 1.0× speed. Group B watched the transducers video first at 1.5× speed followed by the artifacts video at 1.0× speed. The percentage correct on the written assessment were calculated for each subject at each video speed. The mean and standard deviation were also calculated using a t-test to determine if there was a significant difference in assessment scores between 1.5× and 1.0× speeds. Results There was a significant (p=0.0188) detriment in performance on the artifacts quiz at 1.5× speed (mean 61.4; 95% confidence interval [CI]-53.9, 68.9) compared to the control group at normal speed (mean 72.7; 95% CI−66.8, 78.6). On the transducers assessment, there was not a significant (p=0.1365) difference in performance in the 1.5× speed group (mean 66.9; CI− 59.8, 74.0) compared to the control group (mean 73.8; CI− 67.7, 79.8). Conclusion These findings suggest that, unlike previously published studies that showed subjective improvement in performance with sped-up video-recorded lectures compared to normal speed, objective performance may be worse.


Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2015

Effect of a Novel Engagement Strategy Using Twitter on Test Performance.

Amanda L. Webb; Adam Dugan; Woodrow Burchett; Kelly Barnett; Nishi Patel; Scott Morehead; Mark Silverberg; Christopher Doty; Brian Adkins; Lauren Falvo

Introduction Medical educators in recent years have been using social media for more penetrance to technologically-savvy learners. The utility of using Twitter for curriculum content delivery has not been studied. We sought to determine if participation in a social media-based educational supplement would improve student performance on a test of clinical images at the end of the semester. Methods 116 second-year medical students were enrolled in a lecture-based clinical medicine course, in which images of common clinical exam findings were presented. An additional, optional assessment was performed on Twitter. Each week, a clinical presentation and physical exam image (not covered in course lectures) were distributed via Twitter, and students were invited to guess the exam finding or diagnosis. After the completion of the course, students were asked to participate in a slideshow “quiz” with 24 clinical images, half from lecture and half from Twitter. Results We conducted a one-way analysis of variance to determine the effect Twitter participation had on total, Twitter-only, and lecture-only scores. Twitter participation data was collected from the end-of-course survey and was defined as submitting answers to the Twitter-only questions “all or most of the time”, “about half of the time”, and “little or none of the time.” We found a significant difference in overall scores (p<0.001) and in Twitter-only scores (p<0.001). There was not enough evidence to conclude a significant difference in lecture-only scores (p=0.124). Students who submitted answers to Twitter “all or most of the time” or “about half the time” had significantly higher overall scores and Twitter-only scores (p<0.001 and p<0.001, respectively) than those students who only submitted answers “little or none of the time.” Conclusion While students retained less information from Twitter than from traditional classroom lecture, some retention was noted. Future research on social media in medical education would benefit from clear control and experimental groups in settings where quantitative use of social media could be measured. Ultimately, it is unlikely for social media to replace lecture in medical curriculum; however, there is a reasonable role for social media as an adjunct to traditional medical education.


Western Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2018

Executive Summary from the 2017 Emergency Medicine Resident Wellness Consensus Summit

Nicole Battaglioli; Felix Ankel; Christopher Doty; Arlene Chung; Michelle Lin

Introduction Physician wellness has recently become a popular topic of conversation and publication within the house of medicine and specifically within emergency medicine (EM). Through a joint collaboration involving Academic Life in Emergency Medicine’s (ALiEM) Wellness Think Tank, Essentials of Emergency Medicine (EEM), and the Emergency Medicine Residents’ Association (EMRA), a one-day Resident Wellness Consensus Summit (RWCS) was organized. Methods The RWCS was held on May 15, 2017, as a pre-day event prior to the 2017 EEM conference in Las Vegas, Nevada. Seven months before the RWCS event, pre-work began in the ALiEM Wellness Think Tank, which was launched in October 2016. The Wellness Think Tank is a virtual community of practice involving EM residents from the U.S. and Canada, hosted on the Slack digital-messaging platform. A working group was formed for each of the four predetermined themes: wellness curriculum development; educator toolkit resources for specific wellness topics; programmatic innovations; and wellness-targeted technologies. Results Pre-work for RWCS included 142 residents from 100 different training programs in the Wellness Think Tank. Participants in the actual RWCS event included 44 EM residents, five EM attendings who participated as facilitators, and three EM attendings who acted as participants. The four working groups ultimately reached a consensus on their specific objectives to improve resident wellness on both the individual and program level. Conclusion The Resident Wellness Consensus Summit was a unique and novel consensus meeting, involving residents as the primary stakeholders. The summit demonstrated that it is possible to galvanize a large group of stakeholders in a relatively short time by creating robust trust, communication, and online learning networks to create resources that support resident wellness.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2007

Integrating the Core Competencies: Proceedings from the 2005 Academic Assembly Consortium

Sarah A. Stahmer; Stefanie R. Ellison; Karen K. Jubanyik; Scott Felten; Christopher Doty; Louis Binder; Nicholas Jouriles


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2007

Evidence-based emergency medicine review. Prevention of contrast-induced nephropathy in the emergency department.

Richard Sinert; Christopher Doty


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2002

The effect of hypertension on uncontrolled hemorrhage in a Rodent model

Richard Sinert; Matthew T. Spencer; Renee Wilson; Mark Silverberg; Minal R. Patel; Christopher Doty; Anat Sapan; Bonny J. Baron


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2004

The Value of a Web‐based Testing System to Identify Residents Who Need Early Remediation: What Were We Waiting For?

Christopher Doty; Michael Lucchesi

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Richard Sinert

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Adam Dugan

University of Kentucky

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Adam Rubin

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Amal Mattu

University of Maryland

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Andrew Gorlin

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Bella T. Altura

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Brent King

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Burton M. Altura

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Cheri Hobgood

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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