The TeleHealth OSCE: Preparing Trainees to Use Telemedicine as a Tool for Transitions of Care

Author:

Sartori Daniel J.1,Hayes Rachael W.2,Horlick Margaret3,Adams Jennifer G.4,Zabar Sondra R.5

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, and Associate Director, Internal Medicine Residency Program, NYU Langone Hospital–Brooklyn

2. Instructor, Department of Medicine, and Associate Director, Internal Medicine Residency Program, NYU Langone Hospital–Brooklyn

3. Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, and Senior Associate Director, Internal Medicine Residency Program, NYU Langone Health

4. Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, and Co-Director, Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency Program, NYU Langone Health

5. Professor, Department of Medicine, Director, Division of General Internal Medicine and Clinical Innovation, and Director, Standardized Patient Program, NYU Langone Health

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Telemedicine holds promise to bridge the transition of care between inpatient and outpatient settings. Despite this, the unique communication and technical skills required for virtual encounters are not routinely taught or practiced in graduate medical education (GME) programs. Objective To develop an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) case to assess residents' telemedicine-specific skills and identify potential gaps in our residency program's curriculum. Methods As part of a multi-station OSCE in 2019, we developed a case simulating a remote encounter between a resident and a recently discharged standardized patient. We developed an assessment tool comprising specific behaviors anchored to “not done,” “partly done,” and “well done” descriptors to evaluate core communication and telemedicine-specific skills. Results Seventy-eight NYU internal medicine residents participated in the case. Evaluations from 100% of participants were obtained. Residents performed well in Information Gathering and Relationship Development domains. A mean 95% (SD 3.3%) and 91% (SD 4.9%) of residents received “well done” evaluations across these domains. A mean 78% (SD 14%) received “well done” within Education/Counseling domain. However, only 46% (SD 45%) received “well done” evaluations within the Telemedicine domain; specific weak areas included performing a virtual physical examination (18% well done) and leveraging video to augment history gathering (17% well done). There were no differences in telemedicine-specific skill evaluations when stratified by training track or postgraduate year. Conclusions We simulate a post-discharge virtual encounter and present a novel assessment tool that uncovers telemedicine-specific knowledge gaps in GME trainees.

Publisher

Journal of Graduate Medical Education

Subject

General Medicine

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