PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Improving pediatric procedural skills and EPA assessments through an acute care procedural skills curriculum.

  • Maaz Mirza,
  • Elif Bilgic,
  • Ronish Gupta,
  • Quang N Ngo,
  • Karen Forward

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0306721
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
p. e0306721

Abstract

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IntroductionAcute procedural skill competence is expected by the end of pediatric residency training; however, the extent to which residents are actually competent is not clear. Therefore, a cross-sectional observational study was performed to examine the competency of pediatric residents in acute care procedures in emergency medicine.Materials and methodsPediatric residents underwent didactic/hands-on "Acute Procedure Day" where they performed procedures with direct supervision and received entrustable professional activity (EPA) assessments (scores from 1-5) for each attempt. Procedures included: bag-valve mask (BVM) ventilation, intubation, intraosseous (IO) line insertion, chest tube insertion, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) with defibrillation. Demographic information, perceived comfort level, and EPA data were collected. Descriptive statistics and Pearson correlation for postgraduate year (PGY) versus EPA scores were performed.ResultsThirty-six residents participated (24 PGY 1-2, and 12 PGY 3-4). Self-reported prior clinical exposure was lowest for chest tube placement (n = 3, 8.3%), followed by IOs (n = 19, 52.8%). During the sessions, residents showed the highest levels of first attempt proficiency with IO placement (EPA 4-5 in 28 residents/33 who participated) and BVM (EPA 4-5 in 27/33), and the lowest for chest tube placement (EPA 4-5 in 0/35), defibrillation (EPA 4-5 in 5/31 residents) and intubation (EPA 4-5 in 17/31). There was a strong correlation between PGY level and EPA score for intubation, but not for other skills.DiscussionEntrustability in acute care skills is not achieved with current pediatrics training. Research is needed to explore learning curves for skill acquisition and their relative importance.