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Improving physician performance by continuing medical education.
Authors:O E Laxdal  P A Jennett  T W Wilson  and G M Salisbury
Abstract:In 1973 the division of continuing medical education of the University of Saskatchewan initiated a 3-year study to determine the effect of hospital-based education on the prescribing accuracy of physicians. This study was undertaken in response to an urgent need to develop more effective methods of continuing medical education and improved techniques of measuring their effectiveness. The educational program focused on common prescribing problems that had previously been defined by experts in the field. Problem frequency was determined by the monitoring of hospital records prior to institution of the educational program and at 3, 6 and 12 months after the program had concluded; this was found to be a satisfactory method of identifying educational needs and is considered to provide a measure of the quality of medical care. Fifteen physicians at three rural hospitals participated in the study. Seventeen physicians at two similar hospitals served as controls. The average problem frequency for topics selected at the study hospitals was reduced by 63% (the percentage of possible improvement), whereas at the control hospitals the frequency of the same problems declined by 32% over the same period. The results of this study provide evidence that an intensive, problem-based program on therapeutics can improve physician performance.
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