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M4 Interest Group- 2014 Nabil Issa, MD- Director, Surgery Subinternship Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
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1.The professional continuum & surgical sub-I 2.The sub-I in literature 3.Position paper- recommendation threads What we’ll talk about
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The Professional Continuum & Surgical Subinternship
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AAMC: Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA) M1-2 M3 Residents M4
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The surgery sub I in literature Still Not Much!
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What competencies are deficient among surgical interns in particular? Two studies have explored this topic: I.ACS/APDS/ASE National Preparatory Surgery Curriculum II.Medical student subinternships in surgery: characterization and needs assessment
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ACS/APDS/ASE National Preparatory Surgery Curriculum Needs Assessment- Main findings: 1.Anxiety /deficient technical skills 2.Managing multiple simultaneous demands 3.Managing critical/unstable patients 4.Management of Post-op conditions 5.Difficult communications
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Medical student subinternships in surgery: characterization and needs assessment
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Findings Subinternship curriculum elements perceived benefit to student education
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Literature Synthesis
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What students want is more organized educational activities! 1.Formal objectives. 2.Reading list. 3.Review common call problems. 4.Procedures laboratory. 5.Dedicated time with faculty. 6.Direct responsibility. 7.Autonomy.
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Position Paper M4- Interest group: Alan Ladd, Steven Goldin, Anne Lidor, Nabil Issa
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Conceptual Framework M1-2 M3 Residents M4 AAMC: EPA M3 National Curriculum ACS/APDS/ASE Boot Camp
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AAMC: Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA) M1-2 M3 Residents M4
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Recommendation Threads 1.Administrative Structure 2.Goals and Objectives 3.Curricular elements 4.Instructional strategies 5.Assessment tools 6.Clerkship evaluation
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Administrative Structure M3 ≠ M4
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Administrative Structure M3 ≠ M4 M3 Director M4 Director Coordinator
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Administrative Structure M3 ≠ M4 M3 Director M4 Director Coordinator
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Administrative Structure M3 ≠ M4 M3/M4 Director Coordinator
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Role of Sub-I Director 1.Create curriculum: M3 → Residency 2.Explicit goals & objectives 3.Comprehensive orientation 4.Choice of clinical rotations 5.Petition school for resources 6.Protected educational time 7.Career coach
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Role of Sub-I Coordinator 1.Coordinating educational activities 2.Administrative link to school and department policies, rules and announcements 3.Documentation: student and rotation activities 4.Weekly follow up e-mails to enforce task completion 5.Administrative timelines
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Curricular Elements
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Goals and Objectives 1.H&P skills: Concise & pertinent. 2.Clear progress notes. 3.Advanced clinical reasoning. 4.Manage common surgical problems. 5.Perform common bedside procedures. 6.Patient handoffs during transitions of care. 7.Professional communications. 8.Utilize informatics.
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Instructional Strategies 1.Direct observations: H&P/DDx/management plans 2.Professor rounds: case-based discussions 3.Mock pages: common problems 4.Web-based modules: SBAR/Handoffs 5.Technical skills lab: common bedside procedures 6.Independent reading: pt. safety/quality controls/ evidence-based medicine 7.End of rotation project or assay.
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Assessment Tools Composite Scoring: 1.Appraisals of clinical performance 2.Performance on mock pages 3.Participation in discussion during Prof. rounds 4.Procedural competence 5.Professionalism: timely completion of tasks
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Clerkship Evaluation Student feedback Faculty feedback Monitor national trends: AAMC, ASE, ACS, APDS
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Position Paper Update First draft completed
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Manuscript Revisions M1-2 M3 Residents M4 AAMC: EPA M3 National Curriculum ACS/APDS/ASE BootCamp
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QUESTIONS
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