Peters A S, Feins A, Rubin R, Seward S, Schnaidt K, Fletcher R H
Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention, Harvard Medical School, 126 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Acad Med. 2001 May;76(5):484-8. doi: 10.1097/00001888-200105000-00023.
The primary care clerkship (PCC) at Harvard Medical School was established in 1997. The goals are to provide students with longitudinal experiences with patients and to include modern themes in the curriculum: managing illness and clinical relationships over time; finding the best available answers to clinical questions; preventing illness and promoting health; dealing with clinical uncertainty; getting the best outcomes with available resources; working in a health care team; and sharing decision making with patients. The PCC, a required course in the clinical years, meets one afternoon a week for nine months. Students spend three afternoons per month in primary care practices, where they see three to five patients per session and follow at least one patient ("longitudinal patient") over time. Classroom sessions, in both large- and small-group formats, promote a common educational philosophy and experience, and reinforce habits of problem-based learning established in the preclinical years. The students rated 74% of their preceptors excellent, especially praising their ability to facilitate and support good interpersonal relationships with patients, their ability to encourage students' independent evaluation of patients (as opposed to shadowing), and their enthusiasm for teaching. Students saw their longitudinal patients a mean of 4.8 times; 83% saw their patients at least three times. The PCC complements the curriculum of block clerkships in hospitals, and because the two are offered concurrently, students are required to come to terms with two substantially different cultures within medicine. Other medical schools are beginning to develop longitudinal clerkships to ensure that students have essential educational experiences that are difficult to achieve in block, hospital-based clerkships.
哈佛医学院的初级保健实习课程(PCC)于1997年设立。其目标是为学生提供与患者的长期接触机会,并在课程中纳入现代主题:长期管理疾病和临床关系;为临床问题找到最佳答案;预防疾病和促进健康;应对临床不确定性;利用现有资源实现最佳结果;在医疗团队中工作;以及与患者共同决策。PCC是临床阶段的必修课,为期九个月,每周一下午上课。学生每月有三个下午在初级保健机构实习,每次实习要看三到五名患者,并长期跟踪至少一名患者(“长期跟踪患者”)。课堂教学采用大组和小组形式,促进共同的教育理念和体验,并强化临床前阶段建立的基于问题的学习习惯。学生对74%的带教老师评价很高,尤其称赞他们促进和支持与患者建立良好人际关系的能力、鼓励学生独立评估患者(而非跟班见习)的能力以及教学热情。学生平均看望他们的长期跟踪患者4.8次;83%的学生至少看望患者三次。PCC补充了医院科室实习课程的内容,由于这两者同时开设,学生需要适应医学领域内两种截然不同的文化。其他医学院也开始开展长期实习课程,以确保学生获得在基于医院科室的短期实习中难以实现的重要教育体验。