Students Adding Value: Improving Patient Care Measures While Learning Valuable Population Health Skills
Author(s) -
Shaheen Amy W.,
Fedoriw Kelly Bossenbroek,
Khachaturyan Susanna,
Steiner Beat,
Golding Julie,
Byerley Julie S.,
Helgeson Erika S.,
Beck Dallaghan Gary L.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
american journal of medical quality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.592
H-Index - 53
eISSN - 1555-824X
pISSN - 1062-8606
DOI - 10.1177/1062860619845482
Subject(s) - medicine , odds ratio , odds , curriculum , medical education , confidence interval , ambulatory , health care , quality management , family medicine , quality (philosophy) , logistic regression , psychology , pedagogy , management system , philosophy , management , epistemology , economics , economic growth
Medical students are potential resources for ambulatory primary care practices if learning goals can align with clinical needs. The authors introduced a quality improvement (QI) curriculum in the ambulatory clinical rotation that matched student learning expectations with practice needs. In 2016-2017, 128 students were assigned to academic, university affiliated, community health, and private practices. Student project measures were matched with appropriate outcome measures on monthly practice dashboards. Binomial mixed effects models were used to model QI measures. For university collaborative practices with student involvement, the estimated odds of a patient being screened for breast cancer in March 2017 was approximately 2 times greater than in 2016. This odds ratio was 36.2% greater than the comparable odds ratio for collaborative practices without student involvement (95% confidence interval = 22.7% to 51.2% greater). When student curriculum and assignments align with practice needs, practice metrics improve and students contribute to improvements in real-world settings.
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