Development of a Single-Institution Virtual Internal Medicine Subinternship with Near-Peer Teaching in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic

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Abstract

Problem In March 2020, medical students at the University of Washington School of Medicine were removed from clinical settings in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. As subinternships are required for graduation and an important way to prepare for internship, a virtual subinternship was created to include practical elements of in-person learning and to address limited teaching faculty from COVID-19 inpatient surges. Approach A virtual, interactive subinternship was developed with case-based teaching sessions, communication and critical literature evaluation skill building, professional development, and creation of independent learning plans. Near-peer teachers (NPTs) were selected from graduating senior medical students who matched into internal medicine. In addition to teaching topics from the Clerkship Directors of Internal Medicine curriculum, NPTs engaged in course development, recruited teaching faculty, gathered feedback, and facilitated small groups. Participating students completed pre- and postcourse surveys. Outcomes The 10 students (100%) enrolled in the course who completed both surveys indicated significant improvement in mean scores across 4 domains: evaluating medical literature (3.1/5 to 4.5/5; +1.4, P

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Holmberg, M. H., Dela Cruz, E., Longino, A., Longino, N., Çoruh, B., & Merel, S. E. (2021). Development of a Single-Institution Virtual Internal Medicine Subinternship with Near-Peer Teaching in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Academic Medicine, 96(12), 1706–1710. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000004219

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