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Should We Entrust Learners to Ask Answerable Questions? Evidence-Based Clinical Practice McMaster University June 2014
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Cast of Characters Tom McGinn, MD Chair of Medicine Hoffstra Univ, New York Scott Richardson, MD Assoc Dean, UME GRU/UGA Partnership Mark Wilson, MD Assoc Dean, GME Univ of Iowa
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Turning Over the Keys
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Why??? Gaps Identified between: Program Director Expectations and Skills of Entering Residents What residents do without supervision and what they have been documented as competent to do without supervision Charge to Drafting Panel Develop a clear, concise list of what graduating medical students should be entrusted to do without direct supervision on DAY ONE of residency
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Core Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) for Entering Residency (CEPAER): Report of the Drafting Panel AAMC Annual Meeting 2013
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Specific units of professional work Tasks that trainees are entrusted to perform unsupervised After they’ve attained sufficient competence Olle ten Cate Acad Med 2007 Entrustable Professional Activity Ability to perform a task to a desired level of performance without direct supervision
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EPA DOC M1M1 M2M2 M1M1 M2M2 M1M1 M2M2 M1M1 M2M2 M1M1 M2M2 M1M1 M2M2 EPA: Entrustable Professional Activity DOC: Domain of Competence C: Competency M: Milestone C2C2 C3C3 C1C1 C4C4 C2C2 C5C5
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Delineated a set of activities that entering residents should be expected (entrusted) to perform on day one of residency without direct supervision. 13 core EPAs for entering residency ranging from: - give patient handover to transition care - recognize patient requiring urgent care - to obtain informed consent EPA #7: Form clinical questions and retrieve evidence to advance patient care Drafting Panel Work http//:mededportal.com/icollaborative/resource/887
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Core EPAs For Entering Residency EPAs For any Practicing Physician Expectations for the Medical School Graduate EPAs For Specialties
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‘Entrustable’ Requires Direct Observation of: Level of K/S/A (Ability) Hard work & follow through (Conscientious) Absence of deception (Truthfulness) Knowing one’s limits (Discernment) Tara Kennedy Academic Medicine 2008
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What does this have to do with teaching or EBM???
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Ask Acquire Appraise Apply Action Patient Dilemma Evidence Cycle of EBM
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Ask Acquire Appraise Apply Action Patient Dilemma
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Let’s Listen in on Tom’s 2am New Admission
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‘Background’ Questions About the disorder, test, treatment, etc. 2 components: a. Root* + Verb: “What causes …” b. Condition: “… cystic fibrosis?” * Who, What, Where, When, Why, How ‘RVC’ = Root, Verb, Condition
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‘Foreground’ Questions About patient care decisions and actions 4 (or 3) components: a. patient, problem, or population b. intervention, exposure, or maneuver c. comparison (if relevant) d. clinical outcomes (including time horizon) ‘PICO’ = Patient, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes
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Background & Foreground
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How does it feel … ? To know an answer? To NOT know an answer?
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Emotions in Not Knowing Ready to …FeelingBehaviors FleeFearLeave Invisible FightAngerDisrupt Undermine Cry for helpDistressStop trying Body stress WithdrawSadnessInattention Detachment
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Guiding or Coaching ‘Qs’? Try building up from ‘raw’ question to more complete anatomy (rather than tearing their efforts down) Consider 2 stages: “Sounds like you’re asking a question about … (therapy, prognosis, etc.)” “What would be the … (missing anatomy) you would want to know?”
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Now, listen closely for how this may sound…
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‘Hoot Groups’ Task Groups of 2 – 3 What specifically could you implement back home to ensure that your learners can ask answerable clinical questions? Return in 3 minutes
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Entrusting Clinical Questions
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Ask Acquire Appraise Apply Action Patient Dilemma
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