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– When it comes to handling after-hours phone calls from patients, endocrinology fellows generally have less confidence in their decision making than their supervising faculty have in them, as measured by faculty’s reported agreement with fellows’ management plans. In addition, their confidence varies widely depending on the reason for call, results from a small, single-center study suggest.

Doug Brunk/MDedge News
Dr. Ramya Punati

“The research on training in telephone medicine is sparse,” lead study author Ramya Punati, MD, said in an interview in advance of the annual scientific and clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists. “Our field relies on blood sugars and patient monitoring at home. We get a large volume of such calls, so while supervising faculty are always available for questions overnight, I think it would be useful to have a formal curriculum or feedback process in place at all major medical centers for fellows to learn how to appropriately manage outpatient calls.”

In October 2018, 6 endocrinology fellows and 13 endocrinology faculty members at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, completed baseline surveys. Fellows were asked how often they felt confident on after-hours calls managing specific conditions, such as problems with insulin pumps, positive ketones, and hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia. Faculty were asked how often they agreed with the fellows’ management of the same conditions.

One month later, the researchers implemented a two-part intervention. Part one consisted of a 1-hour didactic session for the six fellows about how to handle common outpatient diabetes-related calls. Part two involved a process by which faculty gave feedback through the EMR on decisions that fellows make on after-hours calls. Assistance provided in real time by supervising faculty was not measured.

In April 2019, the researchers used the same surveys to reassess the fellows’ and the faculty’s confidence. In addition, “pre- and postintervention, fellows were asked two questions to reflect on the perceived utility of taking outpatient calls,” said Dr. Punati, who is an endocrinology fellow at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. “One was, ‘Do you feel that taking outpatient calls allows you to impact patient care in a meaningful way?’ The other was, ‘Do you feel that taking after-hours calls is educational for you?’ ”

At baseline, all fellows reported that they rarely received feedback from outpatient faculty on decisions they make on after-hours calls. Following implementation of the intervention, most fellows reported a slight increase in the feedback received. Pre- and postintervention, most fellows said that they were able to affect care in a meaningful way by handling after-hours calls, but felt that taking such calls had more limited educational value.

She and her colleagues found that faculty confidence in after-hour decision making by endocrine fellows is generally higher than fellows’ reported confidence in the same domains. At baseline, both faculty and fellows had highest confidence in the ability of fellows to manage calls related to fluctuations in blood glucose, and both groups had lowest ratings in management of insulin pump problems and diabetic ketoacidosis. After the intervention, both fellows and faculty had increased confidence in the ability of fellows to manage all types of calls, compared with baseline.

“It’s hard to say how much of the improvement is due to the intervention versus the passage of time and experience,” Dr. Punati said. “By the nature of taking more calls and getting more experience, fellows are going to get more confident as the year goes on.”

Fellows’ responses about their confidence in handling after-hours calls and their perception of the educational value of that responsibility highlight the need for a more formalized curriculum in telephone medicine and feedback process, she said.

Dr. Punati recommends a combination of didactic instruction early in endocrinology fellowship training and ongoing feedback for decisions that fellows make during after-hours calls.

“That process of feedback is the only way fellows will improve their knowledge and their confidence in handling these calls,” she said. In fact, as a result of the study, the university’s endocrinology fellowship program has already implemented changes in the academic curriculum to enhance the fellows’ educational experience and provide them with tools they need to confidently manage these calls.

Dr. Punati reported having no financial disclosures.

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– When it comes to handling after-hours phone calls from patients, endocrinology fellows generally have less confidence in their decision making than their supervising faculty have in them, as measured by faculty’s reported agreement with fellows’ management plans. In addition, their confidence varies widely depending on the reason for call, results from a small, single-center study suggest.

Doug Brunk/MDedge News
Dr. Ramya Punati

“The research on training in telephone medicine is sparse,” lead study author Ramya Punati, MD, said in an interview in advance of the annual scientific and clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists. “Our field relies on blood sugars and patient monitoring at home. We get a large volume of such calls, so while supervising faculty are always available for questions overnight, I think it would be useful to have a formal curriculum or feedback process in place at all major medical centers for fellows to learn how to appropriately manage outpatient calls.”

In October 2018, 6 endocrinology fellows and 13 endocrinology faculty members at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, completed baseline surveys. Fellows were asked how often they felt confident on after-hours calls managing specific conditions, such as problems with insulin pumps, positive ketones, and hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia. Faculty were asked how often they agreed with the fellows’ management of the same conditions.

One month later, the researchers implemented a two-part intervention. Part one consisted of a 1-hour didactic session for the six fellows about how to handle common outpatient diabetes-related calls. Part two involved a process by which faculty gave feedback through the EMR on decisions that fellows make on after-hours calls. Assistance provided in real time by supervising faculty was not measured.

In April 2019, the researchers used the same surveys to reassess the fellows’ and the faculty’s confidence. In addition, “pre- and postintervention, fellows were asked two questions to reflect on the perceived utility of taking outpatient calls,” said Dr. Punati, who is an endocrinology fellow at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. “One was, ‘Do you feel that taking outpatient calls allows you to impact patient care in a meaningful way?’ The other was, ‘Do you feel that taking after-hours calls is educational for you?’ ”

At baseline, all fellows reported that they rarely received feedback from outpatient faculty on decisions they make on after-hours calls. Following implementation of the intervention, most fellows reported a slight increase in the feedback received. Pre- and postintervention, most fellows said that they were able to affect care in a meaningful way by handling after-hours calls, but felt that taking such calls had more limited educational value.

She and her colleagues found that faculty confidence in after-hour decision making by endocrine fellows is generally higher than fellows’ reported confidence in the same domains. At baseline, both faculty and fellows had highest confidence in the ability of fellows to manage calls related to fluctuations in blood glucose, and both groups had lowest ratings in management of insulin pump problems and diabetic ketoacidosis. After the intervention, both fellows and faculty had increased confidence in the ability of fellows to manage all types of calls, compared with baseline.

“It’s hard to say how much of the improvement is due to the intervention versus the passage of time and experience,” Dr. Punati said. “By the nature of taking more calls and getting more experience, fellows are going to get more confident as the year goes on.”

Fellows’ responses about their confidence in handling after-hours calls and their perception of the educational value of that responsibility highlight the need for a more formalized curriculum in telephone medicine and feedback process, she said.

Dr. Punati recommends a combination of didactic instruction early in endocrinology fellowship training and ongoing feedback for decisions that fellows make during after-hours calls.

“That process of feedback is the only way fellows will improve their knowledge and their confidence in handling these calls,” she said. In fact, as a result of the study, the university’s endocrinology fellowship program has already implemented changes in the academic curriculum to enhance the fellows’ educational experience and provide them with tools they need to confidently manage these calls.

Dr. Punati reported having no financial disclosures.

 

– When it comes to handling after-hours phone calls from patients, endocrinology fellows generally have less confidence in their decision making than their supervising faculty have in them, as measured by faculty’s reported agreement with fellows’ management plans. In addition, their confidence varies widely depending on the reason for call, results from a small, single-center study suggest.

Doug Brunk/MDedge News
Dr. Ramya Punati

“The research on training in telephone medicine is sparse,” lead study author Ramya Punati, MD, said in an interview in advance of the annual scientific and clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists. “Our field relies on blood sugars and patient monitoring at home. We get a large volume of such calls, so while supervising faculty are always available for questions overnight, I think it would be useful to have a formal curriculum or feedback process in place at all major medical centers for fellows to learn how to appropriately manage outpatient calls.”

In October 2018, 6 endocrinology fellows and 13 endocrinology faculty members at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, completed baseline surveys. Fellows were asked how often they felt confident on after-hours calls managing specific conditions, such as problems with insulin pumps, positive ketones, and hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia. Faculty were asked how often they agreed with the fellows’ management of the same conditions.

One month later, the researchers implemented a two-part intervention. Part one consisted of a 1-hour didactic session for the six fellows about how to handle common outpatient diabetes-related calls. Part two involved a process by which faculty gave feedback through the EMR on decisions that fellows make on after-hours calls. Assistance provided in real time by supervising faculty was not measured.

In April 2019, the researchers used the same surveys to reassess the fellows’ and the faculty’s confidence. In addition, “pre- and postintervention, fellows were asked two questions to reflect on the perceived utility of taking outpatient calls,” said Dr. Punati, who is an endocrinology fellow at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. “One was, ‘Do you feel that taking outpatient calls allows you to impact patient care in a meaningful way?’ The other was, ‘Do you feel that taking after-hours calls is educational for you?’ ”

At baseline, all fellows reported that they rarely received feedback from outpatient faculty on decisions they make on after-hours calls. Following implementation of the intervention, most fellows reported a slight increase in the feedback received. Pre- and postintervention, most fellows said that they were able to affect care in a meaningful way by handling after-hours calls, but felt that taking such calls had more limited educational value.

She and her colleagues found that faculty confidence in after-hour decision making by endocrine fellows is generally higher than fellows’ reported confidence in the same domains. At baseline, both faculty and fellows had highest confidence in the ability of fellows to manage calls related to fluctuations in blood glucose, and both groups had lowest ratings in management of insulin pump problems and diabetic ketoacidosis. After the intervention, both fellows and faculty had increased confidence in the ability of fellows to manage all types of calls, compared with baseline.

“It’s hard to say how much of the improvement is due to the intervention versus the passage of time and experience,” Dr. Punati said. “By the nature of taking more calls and getting more experience, fellows are going to get more confident as the year goes on.”

Fellows’ responses about their confidence in handling after-hours calls and their perception of the educational value of that responsibility highlight the need for a more formalized curriculum in telephone medicine and feedback process, she said.

Dr. Punati recommends a combination of didactic instruction early in endocrinology fellowship training and ongoing feedback for decisions that fellows make during after-hours calls.

“That process of feedback is the only way fellows will improve their knowledge and their confidence in handling these calls,” she said. In fact, as a result of the study, the university’s endocrinology fellowship program has already implemented changes in the academic curriculum to enhance the fellows’ educational experience and provide them with tools they need to confidently manage these calls.

Dr. Punati reported having no financial disclosures.

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Key clinical point: Faculty confidence in after-hour decision making by endocrine fellows is generally higher than fellows’ reported confidence in the same domains.

Major finding: Before and after intervention, most fellows said that they were able to affect care in a meaningful way by handling after-hours calls, but felt that taking such calls had more limited educational value.

Study details: A survey of 6 endocrinology fellows and 13 endocrinology faculty members at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Disclosures: Dr. Punati reported having no financial disclosures.

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