- Patel, Aarti;
- Unaka, Ndidi;
- Holland, Deborah;
- Schuler, Christine;
- Mangeot, Colleen;
- Sucharew, Heidi;
- Younts, Angela;
- Maag, Logan;
- Treasure, Jennifer;
- Sobolewski, Brad;
- Statile, Angela
INTRODUCTION: Millennial trainees prefer innovative, multimodal education on topics including the physical exam (PE). Attendings inconsistently meet these needs on family-centered rounds. To enhance PE teaching, a Web site (PEToolkit) was created, but its use was infrequent. We aimed to increase PEToolkit use from 2 to 5 page counts per week in 7 months. METHODS: This quality improvement project took place at a large academic center in 1 Hospital Medicine team. Key drivers informed interventions, and an annotated run chart tracked progress. We tracked secondary measures, including changes in perception of teaching skill among attendings and resident-observed methods of PE teaching, through survey methodology. RESULTS: Median page counts increased to 5 counts per week in 7 months. The most impactful interventions included training senior residents to teach with the PEToolkit Web site and team feedback on Web site usage midweek. Survey responses from 37 attendings showed that those with more exposure to PEToolkit had increased self-perceived skill of PE teaching (P = 0.02). Survey responses from 52 residents showed that those on the intervention team reported more use of video for PE teaching (P < 0.001) and higher frequency of PE teaching (P = 0.02), compared with those on the nonintervention team. CONCLUSIONS: We increased PEToolkit Web site use during family-centered rounds, thereby emphasizing the importance of PE teaching in this setting in an innovative way. Engagement of learners, frequent feedback, and coaching should be considered when incorporating technology in teaching.