Resident Remediation: A National Survey of Urology Program Directors

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS

We performed a cross-sectional study by surveying program directors (PDs) through the Society of Academic Urologists. Formal remediation was defined as the process initiated when resident competency deficiencies were significant enough to necessitate documentation and notification of the Graduate Medical Education (GME) office. The primary outcome was the prevalence of urology programs that initiated formal remediation over the past 5 years. Secondary outcomes included reported competency deficiencies and formal remediation processes.

RESULTS

Across 148 institutions, 73 (49%) PDs responded to the survey. The majority of PDs (67%, 49/73) stated that at least 1 resident underwent formal remediation over the last 5 years (median 1). “Professionalism” and “Interpersonal and Communication Skills” were the most common competency deficiencies that prompted formal remediation, whereas “Technical Skill” was the least common. While the majority of respondents notified the GME office of residents undergoing remediation, formal remediation plans varied from faculty coaching and mentorship (80%, 39/49) to simulation training (10%, 5/49). Absence of documented faculty feedback on poor performance was the most commonly cited barrier to formal remediation. The majority of PDs reported documentation in a resident's file (81%, 59/73); however, remediation processes differed with only half of PDs reporting that GME offices were routinely involved in creating and overseeing corrective action plans (56%, 41/73). Over the study period, 15% (11/73) of PDs did not promote a resident to the next year of training, and 23% (17/73) of PDs stated “Yes” to graduating a resident who they would not trust to care for a loved one.

CONCLUSIONS

Formal remediation among urology residency programs is common, and processes vary across institutions. The most common competency areas prompting remediation were “Professionalism” and “Interpersonal and Communication Skills.” Future research should address developing resources to facilitate resident remediation.

留言 (0)

沒有登入
gif