Resident Perceptions of Autonomy in a Complex Tertiary Care Environment Improve When Supervised by Hospitalists

Author:

Burgis Jennifer C.1,Lockspeiser Tai M.2,Stumpf Emily C.3,Wilson Stephen D.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California

2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado, Denver, School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado

3. Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California

Abstract

Background and Objective: Increasingly, academic hospitals have adopted hospitalist-based systems of inpatient pediatric care. Some studies comparing hospitalists with other attending physicians have suggested trainees are more satisfied with education from hospitalists. However, there are published concerns that the increased presence of hospitalists may reduce residents’ autonomy. The objective of the current study was to evaluate pediatric residents’ perceptions of their own autonomy after a broad ward restructuring to hospitalist-led teams. Methods: We analyzed data from standardized attending evaluations before and after a pediatric ward restructuring at an academic tertiary care hospital. Provision of most inpatient pediatric care changed from subspecialist-led teams to hospitalist-led teams. Numerical scores from evaluations before and after the restructuring were compared quantitatively. Comments from the evaluations were analyzed qualitatively to identify key themes. Results: Before the restructuring, there were 65 evaluations of 5 hospitalists and 602 evaluations of 32 subspecialists. After the restructuring, there were 188 evaluations of 8 hospitalists. Hospitalists were rated significantly higher on all teaching attributes compared with all attending physicians before the restructuring. The attending role in promoting autonomy was mentioned infrequently and reflected residents’ perceived lack of autonomy before the restructuring. The primary theme after the restructuring was autonomy, specifically emphasizing resident leadership and decision-making and the appropriate balance of resident autonomy and supervision. Conclusions: Although patient complexity was unchanged, a comparison of numerical ratings and resident comments before and after the restructuring indicates that hospitalists lead teams differently from subspecialists, with more emphasis on resident decision-making and autonomy.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference20 articles.

1. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medi Education. Pediatrics program requirements. Available at: www.acgme.org/acWebsite/RRC_320/320_prIndex.asp. Accessed January 30, 2012.

2. Progressive independence in clinical training: a tradition worth defending?;Kennedy;Acad Med,2005

3. Care coordination in the medical home: integrating health and related systems of care for children with special health care needs;American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Children with Disabilities;Pediatrics,2005

4. Teaching internal medicine residents in the new era. Inpatient attending with duty-hour regulations;Harrison;J Gen Intern Med,2006

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