Comparing Male and Female Resident Physicians in Central Venous Catheter Insertion Self-confidence and Competency: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Solberg M, Wong A, Ikejiani S, Bonz J, Evans L. Comparing Male and Female Resident Physicians in Central Venous Catheter Insertion Self-confidence and Competency: A Retrospective Cohort Study. Journal Of General Internal Medicine 2024, 1-7. PMID: 39117882, DOI: 10.1007/s11606-024-08982-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchTraining programPost-trainingCentral venous catheterFemale resident physiciansSelf-confidenceSelf-reported confidenceMale traineesDifferences pre-Simulation training programVenous cathetersCannulation attemptsDesigning training programsPhysician residentsInserting central venous cathetersSkill-based outcomesLinear regressionDesignUsing dataMale physiciansResident physiciansCentral venous catheter insertionRetrospective cohort studyClinical competenceSpecialty designationBaseline demographic characteristicsPhysician educationFellowship Accreditation: Experiences From Health Care Simulation Experts.
Musits A, Khan H, Cassara M, McKenna R, Penttila A, Ahmed R, Wong A. Fellowship Accreditation: Experiences From Health Care Simulation Experts. Journal Of Graduate Medical Education 2024, 16: 41-50. PMID: 38304604, PMCID: PMC10829926, DOI: 10.4300/jgme-d-23-00388.1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSimulation leadersFellowship accreditationOne-on-one semistructured interviewsHealth care simulationImpact of accreditationProfessional societiesOpen coding techniqueThematic analysisWorkforce concernsQualitative studyStandardization of training programsTraining programSnowball samplingSimulation expertsFellowship programsAccreditation pathwaysLack of consensusAccreditation effortsSubthemesAccreditationPhenomenological frameworkParticipantsInterviewsSpectrum of opinionsFellowship