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[371] 2022 Summer Series: Re-Run of Episode #140

KeyLIME

Release Date: 07/19/2022

[432] Re-Run of Episode 213 show art [432] Re-Run of Episode 213

KeyLIME

Today's paper was chosen by Dr. Linda Snell discussing the shift in responsibility and the need to survive. Authors:  Walzak et al.,  Publication details: Working in the dead of night: exploring the transition to after-hours duty Med Educ. 2019 Mar;53(3):296-305 

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[431] Re-Run of Ep 218 Does the apple fall far from the tree? show art [431] Re-Run of Ep 218 Does the apple fall far from the tree?

KeyLIME

Released on May 14, 2019   Linda's article discusses what happens to those who go to medical school after parental influence. Authors: Griffin B, Hu W. Publication details: Parental career expectations: effect on medical students’ career attitudes over time. Med Educ. 2019 Feb 7. [Epub ahead of print]

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[430] Re-Run of Episode 224 Time, Motion, and Residency (or Death by EMR) show art [430] Re-Run of Episode 224 Time, Motion, and Residency (or Death by EMR)

KeyLIME

Episode length 24:50 This updated Time-and-Motion study chosen by Jason Frank is a secondary analysis of the iCOMPARE cluster RCT of 2 duty hours approaches back in .  The authors selected 6 US university affiliated and community-based hospitals that had interns working on general medicine wards in 2016. They hired 23 observers and trained them who over 3 months, conducted 1:1 observations of 194 workdays. Jon believes the observers deserve a medal of honour for spending nearly 200 days hospitals watching interns walk around! Voting for Methods and Impact - at 20 minutes in....

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[429] Re-Run of Ep 234 Young et. al. show art [429] Re-Run of Ep 234 Young et. al.

KeyLIME

Episode length - 25:45  The purpose of this study is (1) to discuss the terms used in reference to clinical reasoning; (2) describe how the research team categorized those terms in relation to the meanings inferred by each term and (3) to report where there are disagreements in those interpretations  Voting on Methods and Educational Impact start at 19:30 Authors:  Young et al., Publication details: The terminology of clinical reasoning in health professions education: Implications and considerations. Med Teach. 2019 Jul 17:1-8 

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[428] Re-Run of Episode 206 Physician Burnout = Badness show art [428] Re-Run of Episode 206 Physician Burnout = Badness

KeyLIME

Jason selects an important paper on Physician burnout and how concerns have reached a strident pitch Authors:  Panagioti, et al,. Publication details: JAMA Intern Med. 2018;178(10):1317-1330.

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[427] Re-Run of Episode 204 Pedagogy of the Oppressed (Teachers) show art [427] Re-Run of Episode 204 Pedagogy of the Oppressed (Teachers)

KeyLIME

Tell me something, dear clinician-educator: In your institution, who is more likely to be recognized, your colleague the hard-core science researcher, or your most outstanding teacher? Who will make full professor sooner?  Authors:  Shinkai et al.  Publication details:  Rethinking the Educator Portfolio: An Innovative Criteria-Based Model Acad Med. 2018 Jul;93(7) 

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[426] Re-Run of Episode 227 The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Clinical Performance Indicators show art [426] Re-Run of Episode 227 The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Clinical Performance Indicators

KeyLIME

This paper, Smirnova et al, is a team of heavy hitting meded authors. The group set out to describe how CPIs, as measures of the activities, behaviours, and abilities of clinicians, can inform medical education and health care quality improvement.    Authors conclusions: 19:55 Jason's Spare Keys: 20:37 Voting for Methods = 2, N/A, N/A, 2. Voting for Impact = 5, 4, 5, 4. Authors: Smirnova A et. al., Publication details: Defining and Adopting Clinical Performance Measures in Graduate Medical Education: Where Are We Now and Where Are We Going? Acad...

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[425] Re-Run of Episode 216 Szulewski show art [425] Re-Run of Episode 216 Szulewski

KeyLIME

Jon's chosen article explores the information-gathering techniques of residents by analyzing their initial visual fixation patterns in a simulated resuscitation environment. Authors:  Szulewski et al., Publication details:  A new way to look at simulation-based assessment: the relationship between gaze-tracking and exam performance CJEM. 2019 Jan;21(1):129-137. Epub 2018 Jun 21. 

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[424] Re-Run of Episode 208 Lara Varpio's Methods Consult #6 show art [424] Re-Run of Episode 208 Lara Varpio's Methods Consult #6

KeyLIME

This is 's 6th 'Methods Consult' for KeyLIME.  As a PHD trained scientist working in the field, it is of Lara's opinion that her job is to help others gain the skills and expertise needed to engage in Health Professions Education scholarship and research. Additional material about Thomas Kuhn, ontologies and epistemologies: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy [Internet]. Stanford University: Center for the Study of Language and Information; 2019. Available from:  Kuhn, TS. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. 50th ed. Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press; 2012...

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[423] Re-Run of Episode of 236 Getting to the heart of the matter show art [423] Re-Run of Episode of 236 Getting to the heart of the matter

KeyLIME

Episode length 25:55 This paper was selected by Lara Varpio it focuses on two important qualities for all clinicians to embrace and embody in their clinical work: empathy and compassion. Voting on Methods at 22:30, and Educational Impact 23:27 Authors:  Krishnasamy et. al., Publication details: How does medical education affect empathy and compassion in medical students? A meta-ethnography: BEME Guide No. 57. 2019 Med Teach. 2019 Aug 7:1-12. 

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More Episodes

Welcome to the Summer of 2022 KeyLIME “re run” series! Over the summer months, we will be re-releasing some of our earliest episodes: Give some old favorites a listen or discover some episodes from our archive you may not have heard yet! 

This week, in summer re run #8, re-discover episode 140,  The End of Empathy? which looked at: "what is 'empathy' in health care, anyway?" and had us questioning our own construct of empathy.

Costa, P et al. Measuring Medical Students' Empathy: Exploring the Underlying Constructs of and Associations Between Two Widely Used Self-Report Instruments in Five Countries. Academic Medicine. 2017;92(6):860-867.

View the abstract here

Follow our co-hosts on Twitter!

Jason R. Frank: @drjfrank 

Jonathan Sherbino: @sherbino 

Linda Snell: @LindaSMedEd 

Lara Varpio: @LaraVarpio

Lara Varpio's Disclaimer: The views expressed in this manuscript are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Uniformed Services University of the Unites States Department of Defense. 

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