Kalet Adina L, Juszczak Linda, Pastore Doris, Fierman Arthur H, Soren Karen, Cohall Alwyn, Fisher Martin, Hopkins Catherine, Hsieh Amy, Kachur Elizabeth, Sullivan Laurie, Techow Beth, Volel Caroline
Section of Primary Care, Department of Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Acad Med. 2007 May;82(5):458-64. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31803ea911.
School-based health centers (SBHCs) have tremendous untapped potential as models for learning about systems-based care of vulnerable children. SBHCs aim to provide comprehensive, community-based primary health care to primary and secondary schoolchildren who might not otherwise have ready access to that care. The staffing at SBHCs is multidisciplinary, including various combinations of nurse practitioners, physicians, dentists, nutritionists, and mental health providers. Although this unique environment provides obvious advantages to children and their families, medical students and residents receive little or no preparation for this type of practice. To address these deficiencies in medical education, five downstate New York state medical schools, funded by the New York State Department of Health, collaborated to define, develop, implement, and evaluate curricula that expose health professions students and residents to SBHCs. The schools identified core competencies and developed a comprehensive training model for the project, including clinical experiences, didactic sessions, and community service opportunities, and they developed goals, objectives, and learning materials for each competency for all types and levels of learners. Each school has implemented a wide range of learning activities based on the competencies. In this paper, the authors describe the development of the collaboration and illustrate the process undertaken to implement new curricula, including considerations made to address institutional needs, curricula development, and incorporation into existing curricula. In addition, they discuss the lessons learned from conducting this collaborative effort among medical schools, with the goal of providing guidance to establish effective cross-disciplinary curricula that address newly defined competencies.
作为了解弱势儿童系统护理模式的典范,校本健康中心(SBHCs)具有巨大的未开发潜力。SBHCs旨在为中小学生提供全面的、基于社区的初级卫生保健,否则这些学生可能无法获得此类护理服务。SBHCs的工作人员来自多学科,包括执业护士、医生、牙医、营养师和心理健康服务提供者的各种组合。尽管这种独特的环境为儿童及其家庭带来了明显的优势,但医学生和住院医师对此类实践几乎没有或根本没有接受过相关培训。为了弥补医学教育中的这些不足,由纽约州卫生部资助的纽约州南部五所医学院校合作,确定、开发、实施和评估课程,使健康专业学生和住院医师接触SBHCs。这些学校确定了核心能力,并为该项目制定了一个全面的培训模式,包括临床经验、教学课程和社区服务机会,他们还为所有类型和层次的学习者的每项能力制定了目标、目的和学习材料。每所学校都根据这些能力开展了广泛的学习活动。在本文中,作者描述了合作的发展过程,并说明了实施新课程所采取的过程,包括为满足机构需求、课程开发以及纳入现有课程所做的考虑。此外,他们还讨论了在医学院校之间开展这项合作努力中吸取的经验教训,目的是为建立有效的跨学科课程提供指导,以应对新定义的能力要求。