Susan Hansen knows data.
The research associate at Lehigh Valley Health Network’s Department
of Family Medicine is a part of the Allentown, Pa.-based health system’s
efforts to continuously improve its educational experience for Family
Medicine physicians in training.
As one of 14 family medicine residency programs chosen to participate
in a national pilot program from 2007 – 2012, LVHN’s Department of
Family Medicine research team collected data for five years to track its
efforts to improve graduate medical education. The initiative, called
Preparing the Personal Physician for Practice (p4), was jointly
sponsored by the American Board of Family Medicine and the Association
of Family Medicine Residency Directors.
LVHN’s family medicine residency program had been conducting focus
groups with each resident cohort for years prior to entering the p4
pilot project. The goal of these sessions is twofold: to gather feedback
for continuous improvement and to gauge residents’ educational progress
at various stages of the program. By modifying a few questions to align
with the p4 hypotheses, LVHN was able to use the focus groups as data
points for that project as well.
“We ask residents about the main educational concepts, their on-site
experiences at the family medicine practice sites, and their
relationships with faculty, staff and each other,” Hansen said. “And
then we pull that information together to evaluate our program’s methods
for preparing residents for a career in family medicine.”
It’s a big job that requires quality data.
“Before p4,” said Hansen, “we used cassette recorders to capture the
focus group discussions, but those recordings were good only for
transcription purposes because they couldn’t be uploaded into our data
analysis software.”
So in 2009, the department upgraded to digital recorders.
After four years of experience using various digital recorders, the
residency program researchers had the opportunity to take the Olympus DS-3500
professional dictation device for a spin during two focus group
sessions this past spring. Having gathered six to eight residents and
two research team members for each session, Hansen conducted the focus
groups in a small conference room around one long table. Hansen placed
one DS-3500 on either end of the table to ensure no voice or comment
would be missed.
It wasn’t. Thanks to the DS-3500’s speech-optimized, independently housed microphone, voices were captured flawlessly.
“One resident spoke very low and soft,” said Hansen, “so that was
something I was concerned about – were we going to be able to pick up
what she said? It turned out not to be an issue; I was able to decipher
everything. [The DS-3500] picked up everything really well, even with a
room air conditioner running.”
While Hansen’s team didn’t use the security features of the DS-3500,
she said she could appreciate the option of device password protection
and DSS Pro real-time 128- and 256-bit file encryption. In addition,
Olympus Professional Dictation equipment is compliant with HIPAA and other privacy regulations.
“As a researcher, protecting data is very important to me,” said
Hansen. “Because we conducted the groups on-campus and imported
information to our system right away, we didn’t need to use the security
features.”
Something else that Hansen considered a benefit? The light indicating that the device was operating in recording mode.
“It seems silly, but it was nice to be able to glance at the device
during a focus group to make sure it was still recording. Not every
recording device has that,” she said.
In addition, Hansen said it was helpful that the DS-3500 was easy to
operate. “All I had to do was flip a switch to turn it on, push a
button, and check to see that the light was glowing,” she said. With a
limited amount of time to get through the list of focus group questions,
Hansen appreciated the device’s reliability and quick start up.
The result? Hours of usable data that Hansen and her colleagues will
analyze for clues about how to improve the education of LVHN family
medicine residents and the care they provide to residents in the Lehigh
Valley.
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