Lipkin Mack, Zabar Sondra R, Kalet Adina L, Laponis Ryan, Kachur Elizabeth, Anderson Marian, Gillespie Colleen C
Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency Education Program, Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016, USA.
Acad Med. 2008 Nov;83(11):1064-70. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31818928ab.
To assess 23 years of Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Title VII Training in Primary Care Medicine and Dentistry funding to the New York University School of Medicine/Bellevue Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency Program. The program, begun in 1983 within a traditional, inner-city, subspecialty-oriented internal medicine program, evolved into a crucible of systematic innovation, catalyzed and made feasible by initiatives funded by the HRSA. The curriculum stressed three pillars of generalism: psychosocial medicine, clinical epidemiology, and health policy. It developed tight, objectives-driven, effective, nonmedical specialty blocks and five weekly primary care activities that created a paradigm-driven, community-based, role-modeling matrix. Innovation was built in. Every block and activity was evaluated immediately and in an annual, program-wide retreat. Evaluation evolved from behavioral checklists of taped interviews to performance-based, systematic, annual objective structured clinical examinations.
The authors reviewed eight grant proposals, project reports, and curriculum and program evaluations. They also quantitatively and qualitatively surveyed the 122 reachable graduates from the first 20 graduating classes of the program.
Analysis of program documents revealed recurring emphases on the use of proven educational models, strategic innovation, and assessment and evaluation to design and refine the program. There were 104 respondents (85%) to the survey. A total of 87% of the graduates practice as primary care physicians, 83% teach, and 90% work with the underserved; 54% do research, 36% actively advocate on health issues for their patients, programs, and other constituencies, and 30% publish. Graduates cited work in the community and faculty excitement and energy as essential elements of the program's impact; overall, graduates reported high personal and career satisfaction and low burnout.
With HRSA support, a focused, innovative program evolved which has already met each of the six recommendations for future innovation of the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine Education Redesign Task Force. This article is part of a theme issue of Academic Medicine on the Title VII health professions training programs.
评估美国卫生资源与服务管理局(HRSA)在过去23年里为纽约大学医学院/贝莱维初级保健内科住院医师培训项目提供的初级保健医学与牙科培训资金。该项目始于1983年,当时处于一个传统的、位于市中心的、以亚专科为主的内科项目中,在HRSA资助的倡议推动下,逐渐演变成一个系统创新的熔炉,并使其成为可能。课程强调通科医学的三大支柱:社会心理医学、临床流行病学和卫生政策。它开发了紧凑的、以目标为导向的、有效的非医学专科模块以及每周五次的初级保健活动,创建了一个由范式驱动、基于社区、具有榜样作用的矩阵。创新融入其中。每个模块和活动都立即进行评估,并在每年一次的全项目务虚会上进行评估。评估方式从录像访谈的行为清单发展为基于表现的、系统的年度客观结构化临床考试。
作者查阅了八份资助提案、项目报告以及课程与项目评估资料。他们还对该项目前20届可联系到的122名毕业生进行了定量和定性调查。
对项目文件的分析表明,在设计和完善项目时,反复强调使用经过验证的教育模式、战略创新以及评估。调查有104名受访者(85%)。共有87%的毕业生从事初级保健医生工作,83%从事教学,90%为弱势群体服务;54%进行研究,36%积极为患者、项目及其他选民就健康问题进行倡导,30%发表文章。毕业生们将在社区的工作以及教员的热情与活力视为该项目产生影响的关键要素;总体而言,毕业生们表示个人满意度和职业满意度较高,职业倦怠程度较低。
在HRSA的支持下,一个重点突出、富有创新性的项目得以发展,该项目已经满足了学术内科联盟教育重新设计特别工作组未来创新的六项建议中的每一项。本文是《学术医学》关于第七章卫生专业培训项目主题专刊的一部分。