TY - JOUR T1 - Practice corner: Chair’s rounds JF - Evidence Based Medicine JO - Evid Based Med SP - 133 LP - 134 DO - 10.1136/ebm.12.5.133 VL - 12 IS - 5 AU - Brian Schmitt AU - Mathew Baugh AU - Steve Scaglione Y1 - 2007/10/01 UR - http://ebm.bmj.com/content/12/5/133.abstract N2 - For many training programmes, a weekly Chair’s Rounds is an opportunity for residents to present challenging cases to the Chief of Medicine with the hope of identifying new diagnostic and/or therapeutic insights for the management of a given patient. The quality of this free-form discussion (sometimes a “free-for-all”) generally reflects the depth of knowledge and experience of the Chair with the patient’s clinical situation. However, recommendations and opinions may not reflect the best (or current) evidence for guiding real life decisions at hand. We revised the format of our Chair’s Rounds 3 years ago to improve medical decision making directed toward specific patients while simultaneously teaching principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM).1 Our goal was to integrate the tools and methods of EBM into the care of specific patients.1 We focused on improving residents’ understanding of the quantitative measures of medicine, formulating appropriate clinical questions, conducting a literature search to answer the question, and learning clinical epidemiological guidelines for critically assessing the selected literature. Residents’ case presentations and diagnostic reasoning remain key elements of the Rounds, but we reorganised the time to achieve the above objectives. Weekly Chair’s Rounds are 75 minutes long and focus on 3 separate activities: the “statistical hot seat,” critical appraisal of a specific case-related article, and new case presentations with question formulation. Each week, a clinical problem is circulated to all residents and students on medical service 2 days before Rounds. The clinical problem is derived from previous cases and focuses on data interpretation skills. … ER -