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Introduction to Teaching Evidence-based Health Care

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Introduction to Teaching Evidence-based Health Care Sharon E. Straus MD MSc FRCPC Associate Professor, University of Toronto Knowledge Translation Program – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Teaching Evidence-based Health Care


1
Introduction to Teaching Evidence-based Health
Care
  • Sharon E. Straus MD MSc FRCPC
  • Associate Professor, University of Toronto
  • Knowledge Translation Program

2
Objectives
  • To outline a potential framework for teaching EBM
  • To describe how this framework can be used for
    evaluating our EBM educational initiatives
  • To discuss some of your objectives for this
    workshop

3
What is EBHC?
  • EBHC requires the integration of the best
    available research evidence with
  • our clinical expertise and
  • our patients unique values and circumstances

4
Its practice requires
  • Asking
  • Acquiring
  • Appraising
  • Applying
  • Assessing

5
A framework for teaching EBHC and evaluating our
efforts
  • Who is the learner?
  • What is the intervention?
  • What are the outcomes?

6
Who is the learner?
  • We must identify our learners, their needs and
    their learning styles
  • Learners include clinicians who want to practise
    EBHC and the patients they care for
  • Do all clinicians want or need to learn how to
    practise all 5 steps?

7
Who is the learner?
  • Targeted Clinicians
  • EBHC Doers
  • EBHC Users
  • EBHC Replicators
  • The extent to which each of the 5 steps is
    performed is determined by
  • The nature of the encountered condition
  • Time constraints
  • Level of expertise with each of the 5 skills

8
What is the intervention?
  • The 5 steps of practising EBHC but what is the
    appropriate dose, formulation and method of
    delivery?
  • 1 minute or 60 hours
  • Journal clubs and/or freestanding courses
  • At the bedside, in the classroom or online

9
What is the intervention?
  • If our learners are interested in the using
    mode, the intervention should focus on
    formulation of questions, searching for
    preappraised evidence and applying that evidence
  • If the learners are interested in the doing
    mode, they should receive training in all 5
    skills
  • The intervention should match the clinical
    setting, available time and other circumstances

10
What is the intervention?
  • One approach doesnt meet all our learners needs
  • Some studies use an approach to clinical practice
    and others use training in discrete microskills
    of EBHC
  • Review of graduate medical education found 18
    reports of curricula and most commonly focused on
    critical appraisal
  • Some courses last 90 minutes, others weeks to
    months
  • Acad Med 199974686-94
  • Depending on the targeted learner, different
    skills emphasized

11
What are the relevant outcomes?
  • Attitudes
  • Knowledge
  • Skills
  • Behaviours
  • Clinical outcomes

12
What are the relevant outcomes?
  • Attitudes
  • There are several studies that have looked at
    attitudes towards EBM but little psychometric
    data available
  • Self-Directed Learning Readiness Scale can be
    used to assess readiness and is defined as the
    degree to which the individual possesses the
    attitudes, abilities, and personality
    characteristics necessary for SDL

13
What are the relevant outcomes?
  • Knowledge and Skills
  • Changes in clinicians knowledge and skills are
    relatively easy to detect and demonstrate
  • Several instruments developed to evaluate these
  • However, these instruments primarily focus on
    evaluating skills of clinicians who want to
    practise in the doing mode rather than the
    using mode

14
Effect of teaching strategies on critical
appraisal skills
  • Review of 7 studies showed gain in knowledge
    (assessed by written test) in undergrads
  • Cochrane review identified 1 study that met
    inclusion criteria
  • Critical appraisal course increased knowledge of
    critical appraisal
  • No studies found increased use of medical
    literature or change in other behaviours
  • CMAJ 1998158177-81 Cochrane Library Update
    Software, Issue 3, 2005 (review updated, 2001 )

15
What are the relevant outcomes?
  • Behaviours
  • More difficult to measure because they require
    assessment in the practice setting
  • One study included videotaping of
    resident-patient interactions and analysing them
    for EBHC content
  • A recent before and after study found that a
    multi-component EBHC intervention significantly
    improved evidence-based practice patterns (JGIM,
    2005)
  • Clinical Outcomes
  • The most difficult to measure

16
Consider your most recent EBM teaching experience
  • Who was the learner, what was the intervention,
    what was the outcome
  • What worked during this session?
  • What didnt work during this session?

17
The top 10 successes that weve had or seen in
teaching EBM
  • Teaching EBM succeeds
  • When it centers around real clinical decisions
  • When it focuses on learners actual learning
    needs
  • When it balances passive with active learning
  • When it connects new knowledge to old
  • When it involves everyone on the team

18
Top 10 successes
  • Teaching EBM succeeds
  • When it matches and takes advantage of, the
    clinical setting, available time, and other
    circumstances
  • When it balances preparedness with opportunism
  • When it makes explicit how to make judgments,
    whether about the evidence itself or how to
    integrate evidence with other knowledge, clinical
    expertise and patient preferences
  • When it builds learners lifelong learning
    abilities

19
Top 10 mistakes weve made or see when teaching
EBM
  • Teaching EBM fails
  • When learning how to do research is emphasised
    over how to use it
  • When learning how to do statistics is emphasised
    over how to interpret them
  • When teaching EBM is limited to finding flaws in
    published research
  • When teaching portrays EBM as substituting
    research evidence for, rather than adding it to
    clinical expertise, patient values and
    circumstances

20
Top 10 mistakes weve made or see when teaching
EBM
  • Teaching EBM fails
  • When teaching with or about evidence is
    disconnected from the teams learning needs about
    the patients illness or their own clinical
    skills
  • When teaching occurs at the speed of the
    teachers speech or mouse clicks rather than the
    pace of the learners understanding
  • When the teacher strives for full educational
    closure by the end of each session rather than
    leaving plenty to think about and learn between
    sessions

21
Top 10 mistakes weve made or see when teaching
EBM
  • Teaching EBM fails
  • When it humiliates learners for not already
    knowing the right fact or answer
  • When it bullies learners to decide to act based
    on fear of others authority or power, rather
    than on authoritative evidence and rational
    argument
  • When the amount of teaching exceeds the available
    time or the learners attention

22
Have fun!
23
What are some barriers to teaching EBHC?
  • Time constraints for teachers and learners
  • Lack of resources
  • Paucity of evidence that EBHC works

24
What can we do in 1 minute?
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What can we do in 5 minutes?
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31
Time constraints
  • Post-call rounds
  • Learners all members of the medical team
  • Objectives decide on working diagnosis and
    initial therapy of newly admitted patients
  • Evidence of highest relevance accuracy and
    precision of the clinical examination and other
    diagnostic tests effectiveness and safety of
    therapy
  • Strategies/Intervention demonstrate e-b exam,
    carry a PDA with synopses of evidence, write
    educational prescriptions, add a clinical
    librarian to the team

32
  • Morning Report
  • Learners all members of the medical teams
  • Objectives briefly review new patient(s) and
    discuss/debate diagnostic and management
    strategies
  • Evidence of highest relevance accuracy and
    precision of diagnostic tests, effectiveness and
    safety of therapy
  • Strategies educational prescriptions for
    foreground questions (CQ log), fact follow-ups
    for background questions, 1-2 minute summaries of
    critically appraised topics

33
Limited time and resources for EBHC Teachers
  • Educational sessions can target the different
    modes of practising EBHC
  • We can
  • Share educational materials
  • Share teaching tips (www.cma.ca/cmaj)
  • Share evaluation instruments
  • Development of evaluation clearinghouse/database
  • www.sgim.org/ebm.cfm

34
Paucity of Evidence that EBHC works
  • No evidence from RCTs showing impact on clinical
    outcomes
  • Evidence from process studies
  • Evidence from outcomes research

35
Whats the E for EBHC?
  • Are we asking the right question?
  • Providing evidence from clinical research is
    necessary but not sufficient for the provision of
    optimal care
  • Changing behaviour is a complex process requiring
    comprehensive approaches directed towards
    patients, physicians, managers and policy makers
  • Provision of evidence is but one component
  • BMJ 200332733-5

36
Outcomes research
  • When cared for by evidence-based neurologists
  • Patients with stroke 44 more likely to receive
    warfarin and more likely to be placed in a stroke
    unit
  • Patients were 22 less likely to die in the next
    90 days
  • Stroke 1996271937-43.

37
  • In a city-wide study of E-B practice vs. outcome
    in carotid stenosis
  • Generated E-B indications for endarterectomy and
    reviewed 291 patients
  • Found the surgical indications
  • Appropriate in 33
  • Questionable in 49
  • Inappropriate in 18

38
  • Stroke or expected death within the next 30 days
  • Expected (if left alone) 0.5
  • Expected (if appropriate selection)
  • 1.5
  • Observed among operated patients
  • gt5
  • Stroke 199728891-8.
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