JMIR Medical Education (May 2024)

Hospital Use of a Web-Based Clinical Knowledge Support System and In-Training Examination Performance Among Postgraduate Resident Physicians in Japan: Nationwide Observational Study

  • Koshi Kataoka,
  • Yuji Nishizaki,
  • Taro Shimizu,
  • Yu Yamamoto,
  • Kiyoshi Shikino,
  • Masanori Nojima,
  • Kazuya Nagasaki,
  • Sho Fukui,
  • Sho Nishiguchi,
  • Kohta Katayama,
  • Masaru Kurihara,
  • Rieko Ueda,
  • Hiroyuki Kobayashi,
  • Yasuharu Tokuda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/52207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. e52207 – e52207

Abstract

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Abstract BackgroundThe relationship between educational outcomes and the use of web-based clinical knowledge support systems in teaching hospitals remains unknown in Japan. A previous study on this topic could have been affected by recall bias because of the use of a self-reported questionnaire. ObjectiveWe aimed to explore the relationship between the use of the Wolters Kluwer UpToDate clinical knowledge support system in teaching hospitals and residents’ General Medicine In-Training Examination (GM-ITE) scores. In this study, we objectively evaluated the relationship between the total number of UpToDate hospital use logs and the GM-ITE scores. MethodsThis nationwide cross-sectional study included postgraduate year–1 and –2 residents who had taken the examination in the 2020 academic year. Hospital-level information was obtained from published web pages, and UpToDate hospital use logs were provided by Wolters Kluwer. We evaluated the relationship between the total number of UpToDate hospital use logs and residents’ GM-ITE scores. We analyzed 215 teaching hospitals with at least 5 GM-ITE examinees and hospital use logs from 2017 to 2019. ResultsThe study population consisted of 3013 residents from 215 teaching hospitals with at least 5 GM-ITE examinees and web-based resource use log data from 2017 to 2019. High-use hospital residents had significantly higher GM-ITE scores than low-use hospital residents (mean 26.9, SD 2.0 vs mean 26.2, SD 2.3; PdrPP ConclusionsThe findings suggest that the development of residents’ clinical reasoning abilities through UpToDate is associated with high GM-ITE scores. Thus, higher use of UpToDate may lead physicians and residents in high-use hospitals to increase the implementation of evidence-based medicine, leading to high educational outcomes.