Patient Experience With Resident Versus Staff Physicians: Results From a Cross-Sectional Patient Survey From Canadian Family Medicine Residencies
CONCLUSIONS: In our setting, patients who reported usually seeing resident physicians had worse continuity of care and timeliness for nonurgent care than patients who reported usually seeing staff physicians despite resident patients being older, sicker, and having a lower socioeconomic position. Postgraduate training programs need to test models to support access and continuity for resident patient panels.PMID:38652844 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.729822 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Sean Doherty Payal Agarwal Ri Wang Christopher Meaney Kirsten Eldridge Ali N Damji Debbie Elman Susanna Fung Karuna L Gupta Sakina Walji Linda Weber Melissa Witty Tara Kiran Source Type: research

My Research Mentors
Fam Med. 2024 Apr 11. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.987257. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:38652845 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.987257 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Howard K Rabinowitz Source Type: research

Use of Signaling in Family Medicine Residency Interviewing
CONCLUSIONS: Signals may play an important role in the residency application process for family medicine in 2023-2024. While signals are not anticipated to decrease application workload or stress, a signal may be an important mechanism for a specific applicant to distinguish themselves with a program.PMID:38652846 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.678799 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Gretchen Irwin Kari Nilsen Tessa Rohrberg Kari Nilsen Miranda A Moore Source Type: research

Postresidency Practice Setting and Clinical Care Features According to 3 Versus 4 Years of Training in Family Medicine: A Length of Training Pilot Study
CONCLUSIONS: Training length did not affect practice setting or practice features for graduates of LoTP programs. Future LoTP analyses will examine how length of training affects scope of practice and clinical preparedness, which may elucidate other elements associated with practice choice.PMID:38652847 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.699625 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: M Patrice Eiff Annie Ericson Dang H Dinh Steele Valenzuela Colleen Conry Alan B Douglass W Perry Dickinson Stephanie E Rosener Patricia A Carney Source Type: research

Holistic Review in Family Medicine Residency Programs: A CERA Study
CONCLUSIONS: The holistic review process is an area of growing interest to diversify the physician workforce, especially among residencies caring for underresourced communities. Further discussions on the specific scoring rubrics of family medicine residency programs that use holistic review are needed and could help programs that are facing barriers. Widespread use of holistic review to diversify the physician workforce has the potential to improve patient care access and health.PMID:38652848 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.515525 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Oanh H Truong Jenny Y Wang Peter F Cronholm Source Type: research

Virtual Care: Perspectives From Family Physicians
CONCLUSIONS: These findings can help further direct the discussion of how to make use of resources to improve the quality and effectiveness of virtual care.PMID:38652849 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.592756 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Olivia Ritchie Emily Koptyra Liz B Marquis Reema Kadri Anna R Laurie V G Vinod Vydiswaran Jiazhao Li Lindsay K Brown Tiffany C Veinot Lorraine R Buis Timothy C Guetterman Source Type: research

A Longitudinal Assessment of Resident and New Graduate Well-Being According to Length of Training: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot in Family Medicine
CONCLUSIONS: We found no associations between length of training and physician well-being during training or among new graduates before or during COVID-19.PMID:38652850 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.990826 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Mark A Johnson Patricia A Carney Annie Ericson Briana Money Suki Tepperberg Nicholas Weida Jennifer Somers Jennifer Romeu Source Type: research

Still Undiagnosed: When Health Care Remains a Privilege, Not a Right
Fam Med. 2024 Apr 15. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.696888. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:38652851 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.696888 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Carmelle Kuizon Source Type: research

Authors' Response to Letter About "URiMs and Imposter Syndrome" Commentary
Fam Med. 2024 Apr 16. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.336789. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:38652852 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.336789 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Diana N Carvajal Ruth Enid Zambrana Source Type: research

Climate Change Curricula in Family Medicine Residency Programs: Program Directors' Perspectives From a CERA Survey
CONCLUSIONS: While climate change is an emerging topic affecting health and the provision of health care worldwide, our study suggests that many family medicine residency programs do not teach about it. Family medicine trainees may not always receive sufficient education about the risks posed to their patients by climate change, which could lead to them having limited knowledge and skills when discussing this topic with their patients in the future.PMID:38652853 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.548752 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Frank M üller Akhilesh Munagala Michael J Bouthillier Jesse I Skok Harland Holman Source Type: research

Departmental Metrics to Guide Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion for Academic Family Medicine Departments
Fam Med. 2024 Apr 16. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.865619. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTPROBLEM: Equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) efforts have accelerated over the past several years, without a traditional guidebook that other missions often have. To evaluate progress over time, departments of family medicine are seeking ways to measure their current EDI state. Across the specialty, unity regarding which EDI metrics are meaningful is absent, and discordance even exists about what should be measured.APPROACH: This paper provides a general metrics framework, including a wide array of possibilities to consider measuring, ...
Source: Family Medicine - April 23, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Shalina Nair Jos é E Rodríguez Samantha Elwood Elisabeth Wilson Annamalai Ramanathan Debra Stulberg Belinda Vail Kristen Rundell C J Peek Source Type: research

Envisioning Reproductive Equity for All
Fam Med. 2024 Feb 15. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.211916. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:38506695 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.211916 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - March 20, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Carmelle Kuizon Sarah E Stumbar Source Type: research

Authors' Response to "Transitioning From AFMRD Entrustable Professional Activities to ABFM Core Outcomes to Measure Clinical Preparedness"
Fam Med. 2024 Feb 21. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.657114. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:38506696 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.657114 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - March 20, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Patricia A Carney M Patrice Eiff Source Type: research

Organizing Primary Care Clinicians to Expand Reproductive Health Access: A Qualitative Program Evaluation
CONCLUSIONS: Community-building, peer support, and mentorship are critical to building and sustaining PCC leadership in SRH-organizing communities. Efforts are needed to mitigate burnout, support SRH education and mentorship for PCCs, and transform into a truly inclusive community. The Network structure is promising for amplifying efforts to enhance SRH access through clinician leadership.PMID:38506697 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.589091 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - March 20, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Hayley V McMahon Laura Riker Hailey Broughton-Jones Lily Trotta Silpa Srinivasulu Source Type: research

Transitioning From AFMRD Entrustable Professional Activities to ABFM Core Outcomes to Measure Clinical Preparedness
Fam Med. 2024 Feb 21. doi: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.649460. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:38506698 | DOI:10.22454/FamMed.2024.649460 (Source: Family Medicine)
Source: Family Medicine - March 20, 2024 Category: Primary Care Authors: Bryce A Ringwald Source Type: research