Objective: The objective was to assess medical student perception of resident and attending contributions to nine Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education educational objectives during their emergency medicine (EM) clerkship.
Methods: This was a prospective survey study of fourth-year medical students during their EM clerkship in a single academic emergency department. Students anonymously completed end-of-shift surveys if supervised by both resident and attending physicians. Students estimated the relative educational contribution from resident and attending on a 100-point visual analog scale (-50 to 50) with -50 = 100% resident contribution, +50 = 100% attending contribution, and 0 = equal contributions by resident and attendings. Nine educational objectives were surveyed: evidence-based medicine (EBM), clinical knowledge, chart documentation, bedside teaching, patient throughput, interpersonal communication, oral patient presentations, efficiency, and procedural instruction.
Results: We collected 274 surveys from 65 students. Of the nine objectives, students perceived that residents contributed more than attendings in eight of nine (results reported as mean values with 95% confidence intervals): clinical knowledge -4.5 (-7.3 to -1.7), chart documentation -8.0 (-12.0 to -4.0), bedside teaching -8.6 (-12.0 to -5.2), throughput -13.0 (-16.4 to -9.6), oral presentations -14.2 (-17.3 to -11), efficiency -14.4 (-17.6 to -11.3), procedural instruction -20.2 (-24.0 to -16.5), and interpersonal communication -13.5 (-17.7 to -9.4). The sole outlier favoring attendings was EBM: 5.5 (1.9 to 9.1).
Conclusions: Medical students perceive resident physicians to contribute more than attendings for most of their EM educational objectives, with faculty providing the greatest contribution to their EBM training.