Department of Family Medicine, Mercer University School of Medicine & Medical Center of Central Georgia, 3780 Eisenhower Parkway, Macon, GA 31206, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2010 May 11;10:33. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-10-33.
This article, developed for the Betty Ford Institute Consensus Conference on Graduate Medical Education (December, 2008), presents a model curriculum for Family Medicine residency training in substance abuse.
The authors reviewed reports of past Family Medicine curriculum development efforts, previously-identified barriers to education in high risk substance use, approaches to overcoming these barriers, and current training guidelines of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and their Family Medicine Residency Review Committee. A proposed eight-module curriculum was developed, based on substance abuse competencies defined by Project MAINSTREAM and linked to core competencies defined by the ACGME. The curriculum provides basic training in high risk substance use to all residents, while also addressing current training challenges presented by U.S. work hour regulations, increasing international diversity of Family Medicine resident trainees, and emerging new primary care practice models.
This paper offers a core curriculum, focused on screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment, which can be adapted by residency programs to meet their individual needs. The curriculum encourages direct observation of residents to ensure that core skills are learned and trains residents with several "new skills" that will expand the basket of substance abuse services they will be equipped to provide as they enter practice.
Broad-based implementation of a comprehensive Family Medicine residency curriculum should increase the ability of family physicians to provide basic substance abuse services in a primary care context. Such efforts should be coupled with faculty development initiatives which ensure that sufficient trained faculty are available to teach these concepts and with efforts by major Family Medicine organizations to implement and enforce residency requirements for substance abuse training.
本文为贝蒂·福特研究所研究生医学教育共识会议(2008 年 12 月)而制定,提出了一个家庭医学住院医师培训药物滥用课程的模型。
作者回顾了过去家庭医学课程开发工作的报告,已确定的高风险物质使用教育障碍,克服这些障碍的方法,以及目前的研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)及其家庭医学住院医师审查委员会的培训指南。根据 MAINSTREAM 项目定义的药物滥用能力和 ACGME 定义的核心能力,开发了一个八模块课程。该课程为所有住院医师提供高风险物质使用的基本培训,同时还解决了美国工作时间法规、家庭医学住院医师培训人员国际多样性增加以及新的初级保健实践模式出现带来的当前培训挑战。
本文提供了一个核心课程,重点是筛查、简短干预和转介治疗,可以由住院医师培训计划根据其个人需求进行调整。该课程鼓励对住院医师进行直接观察,以确保核心技能得到学习,并培训住院医师掌握几项“新技能”,这些技能将扩大他们在进入实践时能够提供的药物滥用服务范围。
广泛实施全面的家庭医学住院医师培训课程应该能够提高家庭医生在初级保健环境中提供基本药物滥用服务的能力。这些努力应与师资发展计划相结合,以确保有足够的经过培训的教师来教授这些概念,并与主要家庭医学组织一起努力实施和执行药物滥用培训的住院医师要求。