The COVID-19 Elective for Pediatric Residents: Learning About Systems-Based Practice During a Pandemic

2021 
BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has prompted pediatric residency programs to adjust the delivery of educational curricula and to update content relevant to the pandemic OBJECTIVE: In this descriptive paper, we present how we rapidly developed and implemented a COVID-19 pandemic elective for pediatric residents METHODS: This curriculum was established at a single tertiary care children's hospital in June 2020 We used the ADDIE (analysis, design, development, implementation, evaluation) framework to develop a two-week elective (30 hours) consisting of six flexibly scheduled modules We administered post-elective surveys and exit interviews to solicit feedback to improve the elective and obtain effectiveness of our educational interventions RESULTS: We developed an asynchronous online COVID-19 Elective for Pediatric Residents The curriculum modules focus on pathophysiology of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the disaster management ecosystem, simulation of clinical care, mental health ramifications, and public health consequences We also include six in-situ experiences (visits to a drive-through COVID-19 testing site, testing laboratory and local public health department, a simulation of a critically ill child, and meetings with emergency managers and social workers) to solidify learning and allow for further reflection To date, eight participants have taken the elective All participants strongly agreed on a five-point Likert item survey that the elective enhanced their knowledge in current evidence-based literature for COVID-19, disaster preparedness, hospital response, management of the critically ill child, and mental and public health ramifications All participants agreed this curriculum was relevant to and will change their practice CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate how a COVID-19 elective for pediatric residents could be quickly developed and implemented The pilot results show that pediatric trainees value asynchronous learning, supplemented by relevant in-situ experiences Moreover, these results suggest that this curriculum provides needed disaster response and resiliency education for pediatric residents
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