Afrin Lawrence B, Arana George W, Medio Franklin J, Ybarra Angela F N, Clarke Harry S
Office of Graduate Medical Education, the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), Charleston, South Carolina, USA.
Acad Med. 2006 May;81(5):419-25. doi: 10.1097/01.ACM.0000222258.55266.6a.
Accreditation organizations, financial stakeholders, legal systems, and regulatory agencies have increased the need for accountability in educational processes and curricular outcomes of graduate medical education. This demand for greater programmatic monitoring has placed pressure on institutions with graduate medical education (GME) programs to develop greater oversight of these programs. Meeting these challenges requires development of new GME management strategies and tools for institutional GME administrators to scrutinize programs, while still allowing these programs the autonomy to develop and implement educational methods to meet their unique training needs. At the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), senior administrators in the college of medicine felt electronic information management was a critical strategy for success and thus proceeded to carefully select an electronic residency management system (ERMS) to provide functionality for both individual programs and the GME enterprise as a whole. Initial plans in 2002 for a phased deployment had to be changed to a much more rapid deployment due to regulatory issues. Extensive communication and cooperation among MUSC's GME leaders resulted in a successful deployment in 2003. Evaluation completion rates have substantially improved, duty hours are carefully monitored, patient safety has improved through more careful oversight of residents' procedural privileges, regulators have been pleased, and central GME administrative visibility of program performance has dramatically improved. The system is now being expanded to MUSC's medical school and other health professions colleges. The authors discuss lessons learned and opportunities and challenges ahead, which include improving tracking of development of procedural competency, establishing and monitoring program performance standards, and integrating the ERMS with GME reimbursement systems.
认证机构、金融利益相关者、法律体系和监管机构增加了对毕业后医学教育过程和课程成果问责制的需求。这种对加强项目监测的要求给设有毕业后医学教育(GME)项目的机构带来了压力,促使它们加强对这些项目的监督。应对这些挑战需要开发新的GME管理策略和工具,以便机构GME管理人员审查项目,同时仍允许这些项目自主开发和实施教育方法,以满足其独特的培训需求。在南卡罗来纳医科大学(MUSC),医学院的高级管理人员认为电子信息管理是取得成功的关键策略,因此着手精心挑选一个电子住院医师管理系统(ERMS),为各个项目以及整个GME企业提供功能。由于监管问题,2002年的分阶段部署初始计划不得不改为更快的部署。MUSC的GME负责人之间广泛的沟通与合作促成了2003年的成功部署。评估完成率大幅提高,值班时间得到仔细监控,通过对住院医师程序特权的更严格监督,患者安全得到改善,监管机构感到满意,GME中央行政部门对项目绩效的了解也大大改善。该系统目前正在扩展到MUSC的医学院和其他健康职业学院。作者讨论了吸取的经验教训以及未来的机遇和挑战,其中包括改进对程序能力发展的跟踪、建立和监测项目绩效标准,以及将ERMS与GME报销系统整合。