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Published byNelson Elwin Douglas Modified over 8 years ago
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Resident-led Curriculum Reform Letting Residents help you improve your Curriculum
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Presenters University of Missouri-Kansas City Department of Community and Family Medicine Rose Zwerenz, MD Family Medicine Clerkship Director Predoctoral Director Drew Glover, MD Chief Resident Medical Student Education Committee Resident Chair
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Objectives By the end of the session attendees will have: Learned about our experience with resident-led curriculum reform Reflected on their own experiences as medical students and residents and how those experiences shaped them as educators Gained the tools to get residents to buy-in to medical student education Collaborated with other attendees to discuss ways in which they might implement resident-led curriculum reform within their clerkships
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History of the UMKC School of Medicine Clerkship 6 Year Medical School with combined MD/MBA Program 98% of first year medical students are 18 year old new high school graduates All students have one half day of “continuity clinic” per week during the final four years at the University Hospital All students are assigned to a Docent unit with an internal medicine physician acting as a Docent for the final four years of medical School
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History of the UMKC School of Medicine Clerkship All Students have 2 months of inpatient internal medicine in each of the last three years at the university hospital (6 months total) Students have little or no contact with Family Physicians during the first three years of medical school
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History of the UMKC School of Medicine Clerkship Two non-consecutive one month Family Medicine courses are required in the curriculum The Year 4 (of 6) Family Medicine I required Clerkship Offered in the University affiliated community hospital 20 miles from the university based medical school Prior to curriculum reform the clinical experience was a combination of inpatient and outpatient assignments, mirroring those of residency There was little continuity of contact with learners and teachers The FM I clerkship ranked in the lower 1/3 f all required clinical rotations
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History of the UMKC School of Medicine Clerkship The Year 5 Family Medicine II required rural preceptorship Offered in underserved areas in the state of Missouri Private physicians mentor the students in established community practices and offer one on one supervision and education in a family medicine setting This Clerkship is consistently ranked #1 or #2 of all required clinical rotations in the School or Medicine
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Involving Family Medicine Residents in Clerkship Curriculum Reform: “Why, How and Who” Why: Student Evaluations of the FM I clerkship Mid-Month Evaluations The Student Schedule Student Evaluations of Residents FM Resident feedback Spiraling downward trend over the past 10-15 years in the number of UMKC graduates choosing FM as a career
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Involving Family Medicine Residents in Clerkship Curriculum Reform: “Why, How and Who” How: Initiatives to shape the clerkship experience to be a reflection of Family Medicine as a specialty rather than as a mirror image of the residency curriculum A Full day retreat focusing on the Family Medicine I Clerkship Development of a subsection of the Family Medicine resident curriculum on teaching residents how to teach medical students
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Involving Family Medicine Residents in Clerkship Curriculum Reform: “Why, How and Who” Who: A second year resident and graduate of the UMKC school of medicine with a interest in reforming the medical student experience The Family Medicine I Clerkship Coordinator The Family Medicine Residency Coordinator Faculty Members of the student Education Committee
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The Strategic Plan Goal: To continually improve the impact of family medicine experiences in order to better introduce medical students to the concepts and philosophy of our specialty Aim: To Expose students to a relevant and vibrant curriculum in urban and rural settings using Board Certified Family Medicine physicians as mentors Purpose: To introduce and reinforce the realistic health care needs of more than 56 million uninsured Americans Target: To enhance Family Medicine student interest, reinforce Family Medicine practices and policies, address medical school debt and ultimately, to see 18-20% of UMKC school of medicine graduates enter the specialty of family medicine within the next five years
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Why this Resident got involved I had been there...just a moment ago It was time to pay it forward I was a poor teacher...and I wasn’t alone I wanted to change the perception of family medicine within my school of medicine I wanted my school of medicine to improve its output of family physicians
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Getting Resident Buy-In: “The Holy Grail” The state of medical student-resident affairs upon arrival...bring a helmet Students perceived as a “time-suck” Students often disengaged and many residents preferred it that way...but still complained about it Heard most often during resident discussions about medical students “they slow me down!”
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Improving resident perception and MS engagement from the ground: seriously, where’s the helmet Walking the Walk Talking the Talk Peer-level feedback...and sometimes taking the wheel The Closed-resident meeting; just the perfect spot for an ambush Setting peer-level expectations Recruiting for tomorrow
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Resident curriculum Changes to Facilitate Clerkship Improvement Orientation of residents to changes in the Clerkship and why it’s important to them Giving Residents tools for success as teachers Residents as Teachers sessions Residents receive evaluation feedback from students Where and Who are the resources for Residents as Teachers? YOU can be that resource!
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A Win-Win-Win Situation Benefits for the Students: More realistic view of primary care and family medicine in particular 1:1 time with residents who know how to incorporate students into a busy clinical practice Timely feedback from residents Meaningful interactions with residents Serve as a MEMBER of the healthcare team with specific responsibilities Few assignments outside the hospital and a more focused experience in family medicine More objective clinical evaluations that include behaviorally anchored assessments
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Benefits for the Clerkship Opportunity to demonstrate the benefits of our specialty and mentor our learners in a more organized approach (increased satisfaction among residents and faculty) Improved consensus and overall reputation of the course Improved evaluations for course content Improved evaluation for resident teaching Improved student interest and desire to consider FM as a career Improved student awareness of FM and concepts of health care delivery Improved satisfaction scores for overall evaluation of course content, faculty and resident teaching Improved ranking compared to other required clinical rotations
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Benefits for the Resident Improvement of teaching skills Greater understanding of how to effectively engage and mentor a student Improved interactions with medical students on a daily basis (equals greater satisfaction for resident) Greater understanding for why my staff does some of the things they do and act the way they act! Better outlook on medical student involvement Better understanding of structuring education and a clerkship
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Break-Out Groups Question 1: What was your experience as a medical student interacting with residents?
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Break-Out Groups Question 2: What would you have wanted your medical student experience with residents to be?
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Break-Out Groups Question 3: What barriers do you have to getting resident involvement with your clerkship?
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Break-Out Groups Set a goal for the next 3 months for implementing resident input into your clerkship.
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Question and Answer Thank You for your time!
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