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Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004 Overview of Task Force Recommendations

Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

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Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004. Overview of Task Force Recommendations. An important definition:. “ Physicianship ” - it refers to the dual roles of the physician: that of the professional and of the healer. General Recommendations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Overview of

Task Force

Recommendations

Page 2: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

An important definition:

“Physicianship” - it refers to the dual roles of the physician: that of the professional and of the healer.

Page 3: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

General Recommendations

Page 4: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Adopt “Physicianship” as the organizing theme (a leitmotif) for the M.D.,C.M. curriculum.

Prioritize and update the teaching of the clinical method. (This is based on the premise that physicianship is enacted primarily through the “clinical method”).

Page 5: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Develop on-going evaluation and monitoring of the curriculum.

Allocate sufficient resources (e.g. salary support for tutors, additional funds for faculty development, access to a skills centre, external consultants) to make it happen!

Page 6: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Specific Recommendations

Page 7: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

1. Introduce a series of courses on the “Physician as Healer & Professional”

(PHP)

• There will be 5 courses in the series: PHP-A,B,C,D,E.

• They will replace ITP, ITPM, Professional Skills (formerly ICM-A), Introduction to POM (formerly ICM-E), and Communications Plus.

Page 8: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Current Curriculum SchemaBasis of Medicine & Dentistry (BOM)

Introduction to Clinical Medicine (ICM) September October November December January February March April May June July August Unit 7 b

Unit 8

W C T

Intro to ER/Neuro/Onc

Unit 9b

Professional Skills

Intro to Internal Medicine

Intro to Surg/Anes/Radio/Opth

Family Medicine

Elective

#1

Vacation / Research

Practice of Medicine (POM) Clerkship September October November December January February March April May June July August Intro to Psych/Peds/ ObGyn/Hosp Pract

Pediatrics

Obstetrics & Gynecology

Surgery

Psychiatry

Internal Medicine

Elective

#2

Geriatric Medicine

Back to Basics (BTB) September October November December January February March April

Seminar Option

(Humanities)

Medicine &

Society

Seminar Options (3)

(Basic Sciences)

Family

Medicine

Elective

# 3

Vacation

Elective

# 4

Ambulatory Medicine /Communication Plus

September October November December January February March April May June July August

Unit 1

Unit 2

Unit 3

Unit 4

Unit 5

Unit 6

Unit 7a

Vacation/Research

Unit 9a

Page 9: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

PHP (continued)

• The five courses will be integrated; professionalism, healing and ethics will be constant threads.

• They will be the primary “home” for the teaching of the clinical method, including communications skills.

Page 10: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

PHP (continued)

Many details concerning the PHP courses have yet to be finalized, for example, how to integrate topics in “ethics” and the “history of medicine”? how to make use of the skills center? whether to introduce interdisciplinary teaching? etc.

One important issue concerns scheduling - scheduling of PHP-D.

Page 11: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

PHP (continued)

PHP-D can be offered via two radically different schedules:

1. as a 4-week block at the start of 3rd year (i.e. mid-August to mid-Sept), just before the start of clerkships, or

2. interspersed throughout clerkships (e.g. every 8 weeks, on the last Friday of each clerkship); this model has been referred to as “intersessions”.

Page 12: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

2. Introduce Physicianship Discussion Groups (PDGs)

• will provide a forum to discuss the student’s transition from “laymanship” to “physicianship”

• will demonstrate to the student body that the faculty acknowledges the enculturation that occurs in medical school

Page 13: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

PDGs (continued)

The discussion groups will be linked to the “Physicianship Portfolio” as follows:

• entries in the portfolio may serve as triggers for group discussions

• group leaders will review each student’s portfolio

• student participation in the discussion groups and portfolio will “feed into” the Professionalism section of Dean’s letter

Page 14: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

3. Physicianship Portfolios (PP)

• Each student will be required to maintain a portfolio.

• It will be used as a stimulus for discussion (in the PDGs) and self-reflection (i.e. formative purposes). It will not be used for assessment (i.e. summative purposes).

Page 15: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

4. Physicianship will be evaluated in a longitudinal fashion.

• The evaluation will be formative and summative.

• Clinical evaluation forms will be modified to include a section on “physicianship”.

• The Dean’s Letter will be modified to include a section on “physicianship”.

Page 16: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Physicianship evaluation (continued)

• Pilot project (P-MEX) has already been undertaken.

• A system to permit on-going student evaluation of teacher & faculty performance in physicianship and professionalism domains will need to be implemented.

Page 17: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

5. Develop Community-based education projects

• The faculty commits to securing funds to provide financial assistance to students (i.e. summer bursaries or “studentships”).

• Increase visibility for these projects (e.g. “Presentation Day for Student Extracurricular Projects”).

Page 18: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

6. Renew teaching of the Clinical Method (CM)

• develop a unique McGill approach

• make this a priority for the program

• Note: Drs. Cassell and Boudreau have started this … a “work in progress”; it has been distributed.

Page 19: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

The CM (continued)

• focus on “function”

• teach the foundations of the CM in an explicit fashion: these include: teaching observation, fundamentals of spoken language, narrative competence and introducing topics in the logic of medicine (e.g. reasoning, probability)

Page 20: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

The CM (continued)

• teach communication skills• improve teaching of the Neuro & MSK

portions of the Physical Examination• decide on which procedural skills will

be required (e.g. use of microscope?)• modify the template for the written case

report (e.g. emphasize justification & reasoning underlying diagnosis; introduce section on prognosis, etc.)

Page 21: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

7. Teach Communication Skills (CS) explicitly

• adopt a previously validated model

• an ad hoc committee was mandated to consider this recommendation in further detail

Page 22: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

8. Review the admissions process

• admissions office to communicate the program’s emphasis on physicianship to new applicants

• encourage students with non-science backgrounds to apply

• reaffirm the importance of “altruism” in prospective applicants, but underline that this can be demonstrated by a variety of means

Page 23: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

9. Modify orientation activities for the program

10. Require that all BOM units contribute to the Physicianship curriculum

Page 24: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

11. Reorganize the ICM component

Considered necessary in order to:

• teach the clinical method more effectively

• make better use of the skills center

• (perhaps) accommodate increased student enrollment more effectively

• (perhaps) deal with current “tensions” more effectively

Page 25: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

12. Introduce certain elements of the physical examination during BOM

Page 26: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

13. Introduce an ICM Exit Exam

• make this a skills-based (e.g. OSCE) assessment tool

• include communication skills

• all disciplines participating in ICM would be expected to contribute to this examination

Page 27: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

14. Develop an MD,CM educational blueprint for physicianship issues

Page 28: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

15. Obtain formal legal advice on the physicianship evaluation structure

• This is particularly important re: the issue of “forward feeding”.

Page 29: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

16. Modify definitions of the Promotion Periods

Page 30: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

17. Modify the “electronic” clinical case construct (being developed by MMI)

• It should include “physicianship”.

• It should reflect McGill’s approach to the clinical method (e.g. be congruent with the CS model to be adopted).

Page 31: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

18. Introduce mandatory clinical rotations in rural settings

Three models have been explored:1. introduce a 3-week rotation during BtB 2. introduce a 4-week rotation in the

summer between 2nd and 3rd years3. require that one of the clerkships be

completed in a rural setting and leave it up to the student to select which clerkship

Page 32: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

In preparation for break-out groups

Page 33: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Class size

In 2004 we accepted 172 medical students. We assume that we have reached “steady state”, but we should probably plan for approx. 200.

Page 34: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

The recommendations that we anticipate will be most controversial:

• the Physicianship discussion groups

• the Physicianship portfolios

• modifications to ICM (particularly scheduling issues)

• scheduling of PHP-D (especially the “intersessions” model)

• how to introduce mandatory rural rotations in the curriculum?

Page 35: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

ICM – an alternative scheduling

• scheduling is based on days of the week, (for a period of 20 weeks)

• class is divided in ¼ (approx. 43 students)

Group 1 complete Medicine on Mondays; Group 2 on Tuesdays; Group 3 on Thursdays; Group 4 on Fridays

• all students are scheduled in the McGill Skills Center on the Wednesdays

Page 36: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Schedule –Group 1

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete ER and Neurology in the am while Fam Med and Oncology are in the pm.

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete Fam Med and Oncology in the am while ER and Neurology are in the pm.

M ER Skills Centre

-X

S/A N

M FM Skills Centre

-Y

S/A O

M FM Skills Centre

-Y

S/A O

M ER Skills Centre

-X

S/A N

Page 37: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Schedule –Group 2

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete ER and Neurology in the am while Fam Med and Oncology are in the pm.

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete Fam Med and Oncology in the am while ER and Neurology are in the pm.

N M Skills Centre

-X

ER S/A

O M Skills Centre

-Y

FM S/A

O M Skills Centre

-Y

FM S/A

N M Skills Centre

-X

ER S/A

Page 38: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Schedule –Group 3

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete ER and Neurology in the am while Fam Med and Oncology are in the pm.

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete Fam Med and Oncology in the am while ER and Neurology are in the pm.

S/A N Skills Centre

-X

M ER

S/A O Skills Centre

-Y

M FM

S/A O Skills Centre

-Y

M FM

S/A N Skills Centre

-X

M ER

Page 39: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004

Schedule –Group 4

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete ER and Neurology in the am while Fam Med and Oncology are in the pm.

• Half of the group (i.e. approx. 21 students) complete Fam Med and Oncology in the am while ER and Neurology are in the pm.

ER S/A Skills Centre

-X

N M

FM S/A Skills Centre

-Y

O M

FM S/A Skills Centre

-Y

O M

ER S/A Skills Centre

-X

N M

Page 40: Faculty Retreat – Sept. 20, 2004