Affiliation:
1. Division of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA
2. Teaching and Learning Center Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA
3. Center for Food Allergy and Asthma Research Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago Illinois USA
4. Smith Child Health Outcomes, Research and Evaluation Center Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThere exists strong evidence for the early introduction of peanut to at‐risk infants for the primary prevention of peanut allergy. There is a need for educational initiatives to assist in dissemination and implementation of updated clinical guidelines on peanut allergy prevention.ApproachThe aim for this project was to create an innovative curriculum for paediatricians on peanut allergy prevention. The Intervention to Reduce Early Allergy (Peanut) in Childhood (iREACH) study was leveraged to recruit paediatricians for a needs assessment. Materials from the iREACH study, including an educational YouTube video and knowledge survey, were evaluated. Applying findings from the needs assessment, an innovative curriculum was developed, and updated knowledge survey questions were developed.EvaluationThe iREACH YouTube video had suboptimal viewing behaviours, and iREACH participants had high baseline knowledge scores that did improve after viewing the video. The majority of respondents to the needs assessment felt that all paediatricians needed access to an effective educational module on peanut allergy prevention, and they wanted a broadly accessible curriculum that incorporated quality media and content segmentation. An online, interactive curriculum was developed that includes clinical cases and games, and updated knowledge questions were created with associated internal structure and reliability evidence, as well as relation to other variables evidence.ImplicationThe next steps of this project will focus on curriculum implementation and evaluation through a randomised, prospective study with the aim to serve as an educational model for how to integrate specialty‐specific guidelines into broader clinical practice through education.
Funder
American Academy of Allergy Asthma and Immunology
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Subject
Review and Exam Preparation,General Medicine