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Background With the introduction of Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME), the Canadian Pediatric Anesthesia Society (CPAS) surveyed its members to assess their awareness of and prior experience with CBME concepts and evaluation tools, and identify methods for faculty development of CBME teaching strategies for pediatric anesthesia residents and fellows. Methods An online survey was sent to CPAS members. Outcomes included respondents' previous exposure to CBME and the educational support they had received in anticipation of the curriculum. Questions used multi-item Likert scales and a general feedback question. Results The response rate was 39% (60/155). Eighty-eight percent of respondents spent ≥50% of their time practicing pediatric anesthesia; 78% and 45% spent at least a quarter of their time teaching residents and fellows respectively. Eighty-three percent were familiar with CBME concepts, and 58% were familiar with Milestones, Competencies, and Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs). However, 64% had not received any formal training and 52% had not used any CBME evaluation tools. Learning preferences included small group discussions (72%), lectures with questions and answers (Q&A) (62%), seminars (50%), and workshops (50%). Conclusions Despite widespread awareness of CBME concepts, there is a need to educate Canadian pediatric anesthesiologists regarding CBME evaluation tools. Faculty development support will increase the utilization of these tools in teaching practice.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.22344 | DOI Listing |
CMAJ
September 2025
Medical editor, CMAJ (Charlebois), Ottawa, Ont.; London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (Charlebois), London, UK; Department of Pediatrics (Kelly), Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa; Department of Psychiatry (Kelly), Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario; Canadian Society of Addicti
J Dev Behav Pediatr
September 2025
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Objective: We sought to measure whether receipt of an enhanced 18-month well-baby visit with use of a developmental screening tool versus a routine 18-month well-baby visit (which typically involves developmental surveillance without screening) is associated with time to identification of developmental delays.
Method: We conducted a cohort study of children (17-22 months) in Ontario who received an 18-month well-baby visit (March 2020‒March 2022), followed to September 2022 using linked health administrative datasets. Visits were categorized as enhanced (n = 83,554) or routine (n = 15,723).
Phys Occup Ther Pediatr
September 2025
School of Rehabilitation Therapy, Department of Pediatrics, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Aim: To explore oral feeding management practices, specifically initiation and advancement of oral feeds, across level II and III neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in Canada.
Methods: A national online survey was conducted across 65 NICUs (34 level II, 31 level III), which included questions on hospital demographics and clinical approaches for initiating, advancing, and managing oral feeds. A descriptive analysis was performed on the responses.
Paediatr Child Health
August 2025
Viral Hepatitis Care Network (VIRCAN) Study Group, Toronto Centre for Liver Disease, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
In the last decade, hepatitis C virus (HCV) has become a curable chronic viral infection, with excellent treatment and streamlined diagnostic testing. Canada and many other countries have adopted national elimination targets; however, reaching these goals will require changes in the way care is provided. Standard of care HCV treatment is all-oral daily medication for 8 or 12 weeks and all provinces in Canada have mechanisms for public coverage.
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August 2025
TransLab Research Group, Department of Medical Sciences, University of Girona, Girona, Spain.
Introduction: Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) have several limitations, namely: obsolescence, lack of personalization, and insufficient patient participation. These factors may contribute to suboptimal treatment recommendation compliance and poorer clinical outcomes. APPRAISE-RS is an adaptation of the GRADE heuristic designed to generate CPG-like treatment recommendations that are automated, updated, personalized, participatory, and explanatory using a symbolic AI approach.
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