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BCM Clinical Performance Examination Tyson Pillow, M.D., M.Ed. Anita Kusnoor, M.D. Tyson Pillow, M.D., M.Ed. Anita Kusnoor, M.D.
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BCM CPX Goals Assess the clinical skills performance of medical students after the completion of their third year of medical school. Serve as a competence benchmark for clinical performance (history taking, physical exam, communication, clinical reasoning) at this stage of training.
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Competence “The habitual and judicious use of communication, knowledge, technical skills, clinical reasoning, emotions, values, and reflection in daily practice for the benefit of the individual and community being served.” -Epstein and Hundert. JAMA. 2002;287:226
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BCM CPX Objectives Based on BCM standards, the students will: Perform a focused history in a SP environment. Perform an appropriate physical exam given the SP case. Communicate effectively in a SP encounter. Demonstrate fundamental patient-centered skills that constitute the basis of safe and effective patient care Synthesize and construct a differential diagnosis, diagnostic plan & treatment plan based on the SP scenario provided.
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Framework Basic Clinical Skills Physical Examination Communication Context in Healing Problem Solving 5 Clinical Cases
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Framework 5 Clinical Cases 15 minutes each Outpatient, time-limited cases Checklists to assess clinical skills 10 minutes for interstation exercises to evaluate clinical reasoning
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New This Year Pilot stations (you won’t know which ones) No invasive exams (breast, rectal, pelvic, GU). If you need to do one, notify the patient as part of your plan New communication scale (details to follow) Interpretation of labs and studies Post-encounter note in the USMLE Step 2 CS Format
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Basic Clinical Skills History based on complaint and patient setting Physical exam items evaluated according to BCM standards (available on CPX website) Draw upon experiences from core clerkships, LACE, and special sessions
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Communication Addresses the patient by name Introduces self by name AND title Involves patient when discussing the reason for the visit Maintains appropriate eye contact Uses effective body language Opening the Interview
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Communication Legitimizes patient’s emotions Reinforces positive behaviors Responding to the Patient
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Communication Encourages questions or concerns Elicits patient perspective Avoids interrupting Avoids leading questions Avoids multiple questions Conducts the interactions in an organized manner Uses open- and close-ended questions effectively Checks for accuracy during the interview Conducting the Interview
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Communication Summarizes the interview (history and exam, if applicable) Avoids inappropriate language Reviews next steps Verifies patient’s understanding Educating, Negotiating, Collaborating
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Cases Problem solving tasks related to type of visit New problem Chronic illness Psychosocial
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New Problem Visit Assess Presenting Complaint Information gathering and differential diagnosis HPI questions Associated symptoms Relevant review of systems Thoroughness associated with accuracy Major error is “premature closure”
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Chronic Visit Assess severity and control of condition Signs and symptoms of condition Home monitoring Target organ damage from condition Evaluate adherence and treatment side effects Review status of other risk factors History
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Psychosocial Visit Assess emotional needs of patient Background, Affect, Trouble, Handling, Empathy (BATHE) Evaluate for diagnosable mental illness Evaluate for suicide risk History
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Areas of Weakness HPI Open-ended questions OLD CARTS/OPQRST Alleviating/aggravating factors Associated symptoms Pertinent review of systems
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Areas of Weakness Differential diagnosis Vascular Infectious Traumatic Autoimmune Metabolic Idiopathic/iatrogenic Neoplastic Congential Vascular Inflammatory/Infectious Neoplastic Degenerative/Deficiency/Drugs Idiopathic/iatrogenic/intoxication Congential Autoimmune/Allergic/Anatomic Traumatic Endocrine/Environmental Metabolic
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Areas of Weakness Chronic illness Level of control Adherence to treatment plan Signs/symptoms of end-organ damage Other related risk factors
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Areas of Weakness Psychosocial Effect on functioning Emotional reaction Social support
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Physical Exam Lung Cardiovascular Neurologic Lymph nodes Thyroid Abdomen Neurologic Areas of Weakness Thoroughly test any organ system associated with the chief complaint. Don’t forget to look for complications of the disease. PE should be focused but thorough (should take longer than 30 sec). ThoroughnessTechnique Drape patients appropriately. Don’t listen over gown/sports bra. Don’t abbreviate the heart/lung exam (e.g., don’t just listen to one valve). Don’t be overly aggressive with palpation.
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The Neurologic Exam Clarification of wording Focused - specific components of neurologic exam relating to the patient’s complaints Screening - the 36 item checklist taught in PPS and the neurology clerkship Full - a complete, head-to-toe neurologic examination with adjunct testing tools included Any patient with a primary neurologic complaint should get a screening examination!
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The Neurologic Exam Pitfalls and Tips Memorize the components – be sure to address all of them (CN, motor, sensation, reflexes, coordination, mental status) Full MMSE is not required, but you should ask ALL orientation questions Pay attention to details specified in BCM Physical Exam Standards document (available on website) Time management is crucial on this station Practice the screening neuro exam. Time yourself!
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Post-Encounter Note HISTORY: Describe the history you just obtained from this patient. Include only information (pertinent positives and negatives) relevant to this patient’s problem(s).
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Post-Encounter Note PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: Describe any positive and negative findings relevant to this patient’s problem(s). Be careful to include only those parts of examination you performed in this encounter.
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DATA INTERPRETATION: Based on what you have learned from the H&P, list up to 3 diagnoses that might explain this patient’s complaint(s). List your diagnoses from most to least likely. For some cases, fewer than 3 diagnoses will be appropriate. Then, enter the positive or negative findings from the history and the physical examination (if present) that support each diagnosis. Lastly, list initial diagnostic studies (if any) you would order for each listed diagnosis (e.g., restricted physical exam maneuvers, laboratory tests, imaging, ECG, etc.) Post-Encounter Note
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Performance Information Passing the BCM CPX is a graduation requirement Available online after review and release of grades
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Professionalism It is our expectation that you will show up ON TIME* and PREPARED for the exam *Please refer to the tardiness/late policy
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Professionalism Professional dress + white coat enhances the standardized patient’s perception of your competence
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Professionalism DO NOT share exam content with your colleagues
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Scheduling Exam administration: March 28 – April 7 Online signup was completed in February Refer to the website for specific scheduling questions Dates for testing, remediation, and retesting will be posted in a timely fashion
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Website
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Further Information https://www.bcm.edu/education/schools/medical- school/programs/standardized-patient-program ContactEmail Ms. Michelle Higgs Program Manager Simulation & Standardized Patient Programs Michelle.higgs@bcm.edu Dr. Anita Kusnoor CPX Director avk1@bcm.edu Dr. Tyson Pillow Medical Director Simulation & Standardized Patient Programs pillow@bcm.edu
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BCM Clinical Performance Examination Tyson Pillow, M.D., M.Ed. Anita Kusnoor, M.D. Tyson Pillow, M.D., M.Ed. Anita Kusnoor, M.D.
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