by Smith, Andrew G.; Brainard, Jason C.; Campbell,
Critical Care Medicine: January 2020
- Volume 48 - Issue 1 - p 98-103
Objectives: No
consensus exists on a standardized critical care content outline for medical
student education. The aim of this research is to develop a national
undergraduate medical education critical care content outline.
Design: The
authors used a Delphi process to reach expert consensus on a content outline
that identified the core critical care knowledge topics and procedural skills
that medical students should learn prior to entering residency. Over three
iterative rounds, the expert panel reached consensus on a critical care content
outline.
Setting: An
electronic survey of critical care medical educators, residency program
directors, and residents in the United States.
Subjects: The
expert panel included three groups as follows: 1) undergraduate medical
education critical care educators, 2) residency program directors representing
all core specialties, and 3) residents representing their core specialties.
Interventions: None.
Measurements and Main Results: The expert panel included 28
members. Experts represented the following medical specialties: anesthesiology,
emergency medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics,
and surgery. Seventeen experts had subspecialty training in critical care. The
expert panel identified 19 highly recommended critical care knowledge topics
and procedural skills. These topics and procedural skills were grouped into
five broad categories as follows: 1) neurologic, 2) respiratory, 3)
cardiovascular, 4) renal and electrolytes, and 5) supplemental ICU topics.
Bag-mask ventilation was the only procedural skill identified as highly
recommended.
Conclusions: This
study provides a national consensus undergraduate medical education critical
care content outline. By including experts from multiple specialties, this
content outline is meaningful for medical student education, independent of
medical specialty. The content outline represents a first step in the development
of a national undergraduate medical education critical care curriculum.
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