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      Introduction of a quality improvement curriculum in the Department of Internal Medicine, Lincoln Medical Center

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          ABSTRACT

          Community hospitals with limited resources struggle to engage physicians in Quality improvement initiatives. We introduced Quality Improvement (QI) curriculum for residents in response to ACGME requirements and surveyed the residents understanding of QI and their involvement in QI projects before and after the introduction of the curriculum. The current article describes our experiences with the process, the challenges and possible solutions to have a successful resident led QI initiative in a community hospital.

          Methods: A formal QI curriculum was introduced in the Department of Internal Medicine from September to October 2015 using the Model for Improvement from Institute for Health care Improvement (IHI). Learners were expected to read the online modules, discuss in small group sessions and later encouraged to draft their QI projects using the Charter form and PDSA form available on the HI website. Online surveys were conducted a week prior and 3 months after completion of the curriculum

          Results: 80% (100/117) of residents completed the pre-curriculum survey and 52% (61/117) completed the survey post curriculum. 96.7% of residents report that physicians should lead QI projects and training rather than the hospital administrators. Residents had 20% increase in understanding and confidence in leading quality improvement projects post curriculum once initiated. Most Residents (72%) feel QI should be taught during residency. Active involvement of residents with interest was seen after the initiation of Open School Institute of health improvement (IHI) curriculum as compared to Institutional led QI’s. The resident interventions, pitfalls with change processes with an example of PDSA cycle are discussed.

          Conclusion: A Dedicated QI curriculum is necessary to prepare the physicians deliver quality care in an increasing complex health care delivery system. The strength of the curriculum is the ease of understanding the material, easily available to all, and can be easily replicated in a Community Hospital program with limited resources. Participation in QI by residents may promote constructive competitiveness among related hospitals in public system to improve delivery of safe care.

          Abbreviations: ACGME: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education; IHI: Institute of Healthcare Improvement; PDSA: Plan-Do-Study-Act; PGY: QI: Quality improvement

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          Engaging residents and fellows to improve institution-wide quality: the first six years of a novel financial incentive program.

          Teaching hospitals strive to engage physicians in quality improvement (QI), and graduate medical education (GME) programs must promote trainee competence in systems-based practice (SBP). The authors developed a QI incentive program that engages residents and fellows, providing them with financial incentives to improve quality while simultaneously gaining SBP experience. In this study, they describe and evaluate success in meeting goals set during the program's first six years.
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            Teaching Quality Improvement in Graduate Medical Education: An Experiential and Team-Based Approach to the Acquisition of Quality Improvement Competencies

            Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.
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              Systematic review of the application of the plan-do-study-act method to improve quality in healthcare.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect
                J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect
                ZJCH
                zjch20
                Journal of Community Hospital Internal Medicine Perspectives
                Taylor & Francis
                2000-9666
                January 2017
                31 March 2017
                : 7
                : 1
                : 2-7
                Affiliations
                [ a ]Department of Internal Medicine, Lincoln Medical Center , Bronx, New York, USA
                Author notes
                CONTACT Vikram Paruchuri vikram.paruchuri@ 123456nychhc.org Department of Internal Medicine, Lincoln Medical Center , Bronx, New York 10451, USA
                Article
                1265288
                10.1080/20009666.2016.1265288
                5463662
                2480f3bd-6194-4b3d-a316-8526f6c1fd38
                © 2016 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 7 September 2016
                : 15 November 2016
                : 22 November 2016
                Page count
                Tables: 5, References: 22, Pages: 6
                Categories
                Introduction
                Patient Safety & Quality

                ihi,residents,quality improvement,pdsa
                ihi, residents, quality improvement, pdsa

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