Listen Before You Auscultate Bedside Cardiac Assessment Trailer
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Item Listen Before You Auscultate Bedside Cardiac Assessment Trailer(2023-10-19) Meisel, James L.; Chen, Daniel C. R.; Cohen, Gail March; Bernard, Sheilah A.; Carmona, Hugo; Petrusa, Emil R.; Opole, Isaac O.; Navedo, Deborah; Valtchinov, Vladimir I.; Nahas, Ahmed H.; Eiduson, Carly M.; Papps, NickIntroduction: Bedside cardiac assessment (BCA) is deficient across a spectrum of non-cardiology trainees. Learners not taught BCA well may become instructors who do not teach well, creating a self-perpetuating problem. We aimed to improve BCA teaching and learning by developing a high-quality, patient-centered curriculum for medicine clerkship students that could be flexibly implemented and accessible to other health professions learners. Methods: With a constructivist perspective, we aligned learning goals, activities, and assessments. The curriculum used a “listen before you auscultate” framework, capturing patient history as context for a six-step, systematic approach. In the flipped classroom, short videos and practice questions preceded two, 1-hour class activities that integrated diagnostic reasoning, pathophysiology, physical diagnosis, and reflection. Activities included case discussions, JVP evaluation, heart sound competitions, and simulated conversations with patients. 268 students at four U.S. and international medical schools participated. We incorporated feedback, performed thematic analysis, and assessed learners’ confidence and knowledge. Results: Low post-test data capture limited quantitative results. Students reported increased confidence in BCA ability. Knowledge increased in both BCA and control groups. Thematic analysis suggested instructional design strategies were effective and peer encounters, skills practice, and encounters with educators were meaningful. Discussion: The curriculum supported active learning of day-to-day clinical competencies. Explicitly incorporating notions of trust, it promoted professional identity formation alongside BCA ability. Feedback and increased confidence on the late-clerkship post-test suggested durable learning. We recommended approaches to confirm this and other elements of knowledge, skill acquisition, or behaviors, and are surveying impacts on professional identity formation-related constructs.