Facilitating Real-Time, Multidirectional Learning for Clinicians in a Low-Evidence Pandemic Response

Author:

Hunt Richard C,Braunstein Sofia P,Cuddy Egbert Lauren,Gorbach Katherine A,Rao Monisha,Pearson Jonathan D,Armistad Amy J,Arora Sanjeev,Bennett Celine A,Dezan Amanda M,Herrmann Jack,Redd John T,Jolly B. Tilman,Krohmer Jon R,Struminger Bruce B

Abstract

Abstract As COVID-19 was declared a health emergency in March 2020, there was immense demand for information about the novel pathogen. This paper examines the clinician-reported impact of Project ECHO COVID-19 Clinical Rounds on clinician learning. Primary sources of study data were Continuing Medical Education (CME) Surveys for each session from the dates of March 24, 2020 to July 30, 2020 and impact surveys conducted in November 2020, which sought to understand participants’ overall assessment of sessions. Quantitative analyses included descriptive statistics and Mann-Whitney testing. Qualitative data were analyzed through inductive thematic analysis. Clinicians rated their knowledge after each session as significantly higher than before that session. 75.8% of clinicians reported they would ‘definitely’ or ‘probably’ use content gleaned from each attended session and clinicians reported specific clinical and operational changes made as a direct result of sessions. 94.6% of respondents reported that COVID-19 Clinical Rounds helped them provide better care to patients. 89% of respondents indicated they ‘strongly agree’ that they would join ECHO calls again.COVID-19 Clinical Rounds offers a promising model for the establishment of dynamic peer-to-peer tele-mentoring communities for low or no-notice response where scientifically tested or clinically verified practice evidence is limited.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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