Davis Ardis K, Stearns Jeffrey A, Chessman Alexander W, Paulman Paul M, Steele David J, Sherwood Roger A
AKD Consulting, Mukilteo, WA 98275, USA.
Fam Med. 2007 Jan;39(1):24-30.
In 2000, the Health Resources and Services Administration, in the interest of fostering curriculum reform in medical schools, awarded a 4-year contract to the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine to develop a curricular resource. The contract directed development of a multi-part resource aimed at (1) preclerkship prerequisites for third-year clerkships in collaboration with internal medicine and pediatrics, (2) the family medicine clerkship, (3) post-clerkship preparation for residency training, and (4) specific special topic areas of importance to the government. The Family Medicine Curriculum Resource (FMCR) was produced by primary care educators, with day-to-day direction from an executive committee and overall oversight by an advisory committee. The FMCR was built around a theoretical framework to link medical student competencies with the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) competencies for residency training. Considerable energy throughout development of the FMCR was devoted to obtaining input from potential end-user audiences through an active dissemination effort.
2000年,为推动医学院校课程改革,卫生资源与服务管理局与家庭医学教师协会签订了一份为期四年的合同,以开发一种课程资源。该合同要求开发一份多部分的资源,目标是:(1)与内科和儿科合作,确定三年级临床实习前的先决条件;(2)家庭医学临床实习;(3)临床实习后为住院医师培训做准备;(4)确定对政府具有重要意义的特定专题领域。家庭医学课程资源(FMCR)由初级保健教育工作者编写,在执行委员会的日常指导和咨询委员会的全面监督下完成。FMCR围绕一个理论框架构建,旨在将医学生的能力与毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)规定的住院医师培训能力联系起来。在FMCR的整个开发过程中,投入了大量精力,通过积极的传播工作从潜在的最终用户群体获取意见。