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Just the Facts: how to teach emergency department flow management

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2020

Teresa M. Chan*
Affiliation:
Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, McMaster Education Research, Innovation, and Theory (MERIT), Program for Faculty Development, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
Jonathan Sherbino
Affiliation:
Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, Health Professions Education Research, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
Arthur Welsher
Affiliation:
RCPSC Emergency Medicine Training Program, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON
Alexander Chorley
Affiliation:
Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
Alim Pardhan
Affiliation:
RCPSC Emergency Medicine Training Program, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
*
Correspondence to: Dr. Teresa Chan, 2nd Floor, McMaster Clinics, 237 Barton Street E., Hamilton, ON, L8L 2X2; Email: teresa.chan@medportal.ca

Extract

Even before starting your evening shift you know it's going to be busy. Ambulances are lined up in front of the hospital, and the charge nurse already seems stressed out. The senior Emergency Medicine (EM) resident is standing in the physician office, ready to start her shift as well. You have worked with her a few times during this rotation. She is competent, you trust in her management plans for all her individual patients. Together you both review the patient tracker: a variety of patient presentations ready to be seen, plus an additional 20 patients in the waiting room. Negotiating the learning objective for the shift, the resident indicates that she would like to work on more efficiently managing patient flow and the administration of the emergency department (ED). But…isn't that a skill you just learn from experience? You wonder what evidence-informed strategies might exist for training her for this next step.

Information

Type
Just the Facts
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2020
Figure 0

Figure 1. Approaches to teaching emergency department flow and management.