Systematic training in internal medicine-pediatrics end of residency handoffs: residency director attitudes and perceived barriers.

Journal: Teaching And Learning In Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Background: It is unclear why systematic training in end-of-residency clinic handoffs is not universal.

Objective: We assessed Internal Medicine-Pediatrics (Med-Peds) residency program directors' attitudes regarding end-of-residency clinic handoff systems and perceived barriers to their implementation.

Methods: We surveyed all Med-Peds program directors in the United States about end-of-residency outpatient handoff systems.

Results: Program directors rated systems as important (81.5%), but only 31 programs (46.3%) utilized them. Nearly all programs with (29/31 [93.5%]), and most programs without systems (24/33 [72.7%]) rated them as important. Programs were more likely to have a system if the program director rated it important (p = .049), and less likely if they cited a lack of faculty interest (p = .023) or difficulty identifying residents as primary providers (p = .04).

Conclusions: Most program directors believe it important to formally hand off outpatients. Barriers to establishing handoff systems can be overcome with modest curricular and cultural changes.

Authors
Michael Donnelly, Janelle Clauser, Rochelle Tractenberg