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Evidence for the Effectiveness of CME

1K

Citations

64

References

1992

Year

TLDR

The study evaluates how diverse CME interventions influence physician performance and patient health outcomes. Authors performed a systematic review of RCTs from 1975–1991, selecting studies with ≥50% physicians and ≥75% follow‑up, and classified interventions by activity mode. Of 50 eligible RCTs, most physician‑performance studies showed positive results, while a minority of patient‑outcome studies did, suggesting that practice‑enabling or reinforcing CME strategies generally improve physician performance and sometimes patient outcomes.

Abstract

To assess the impact of diverse continuing medical education (CME) interventions on physician performance and health care outcomes.Using continuing medical education and related phrases, we performed regular searches of the indexed literature (MEDLINE, Social Science Index, the National Technical Information Service, and Educational Research Information Clearinghouse) from 1975 through 1991. In addition, for these years, we used manual searches, key informants, and requests to authors to locate other indexed articles and the nonindexed literature of adult and continuing professional education.From the resulting database we selected studies that met the following criteria: randomized controlled trials; educational programs, activities, or other interventions; studies that included 50% or more physicians; follow-up assessments of at least 75% of study subjects; and objective assessments of either physician performance or health care outcomes.Studies were reviewed for data related to physician specialty and setting. Continuing medical education interventions were classified by their mode(s) of activity as being predisposing, enabling, or facilitating. Using the statistical tests supplied by the original investigators, physician performance outcomes and patient outcomes were classified as positive, negative, or inconclusive.We located 777 CME studies, of which 50 met all criteria. Thirty-two of these analyzed physician performance; seven evaluated patient outcomes; 11 examined both measures. The majority of the 43 studies of physician performance showed positive results in some important measures of resource utilization, counseling strategies, and preventive medicine. Of the 18 studies of health care outcomes, eight demonstrated positive changes in patients' health care outcomes.Broadly defined CME interventions using practice-enabling or reinforcing strategies consistently improve physician performance and, in some instances, health care outcomes.

References

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