Background: No standardized summative tools exist to assess competency in bedside procedures or provide residents and programs with summative feedback. Objective: To provide competency-based procedure training and feedback to residents, we created a procedure competency committee (PCC). Here, we describe the PCC process, its impact on procedure training, and examine residents' attainment of competency in bedside procedures. Design, Setting, and Participants: The PCC consisted of hospitalists and met twice annually to review resident procedure portfolios for three academic years 2019–2022 at a university-based internal medicine residency program. Residents were designated to one of the five competency levels; being able to participate, perform under supervision with assistance, perform under direct supervision (DS) without assistance, perform independently with indirect supervision (IS), and perform independently with IS and supervise others. We analyzed the probability of advancing competency levels with each additional procedure using multinomial logistic regression models. Results: Of the 97 residents, 48 (49.5%) were women and 60 (62%) subsequently matched in procedure-oriented fields. More residents achieved IS level for paracentesis than for lumbar puncture (LP) or central venous catheterization (CVC) (62 vs. 25 and 37, respectively; p
CITATION STYLE
Meliagros, P., Garber, A., Sadr, N., Forrest, R., & Qayyum, R. (2023). Competency-based assessment of procedural skills in resident training. Journal of Hospital Medicine, 18(8), 703–718. https://doi.org/10.1002/jhm.13167
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