Nabors Christopher, Peterson Stephen J, Weems Roger, Forman Leanne, Mumtaz Arif, Goldberg Randy, Kar Kausik, Borges Joseph A, Doctor Ida, Lubben Orpha, Pherwani Nisha, Frishman William H
J Grad Med Educ. 2011 Mar;3(1):75-80. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-10-00037.1.
Rapid growth in the complexity of the health care environment (including monitoring systems for health care quality and patient safety) may result in graduating internists not being adequately prepared for the demands the system places on them. In response, the Residency Review Committee for Internal Medicine created the Educational Innovations Project (EIP) to encourage select residency training programs to develop new strategies and methods to meet changing demands in graduate medical education.
As part of the EIP, our program created an innovative administrative internship. This multiyear curriculum provides systems-based practice training and consists of a series of rotations that take place during the 3 years of internal medicine residency. Each session involves close interaction with the nonphysician personnel who are instrumental in making our institution a functional and cohesive unit. To assess the potential impact of the rotations, we survey senior residents, recent graduates, and faculty educators. In conjunction with the Performance and Patient Experience departments of the hospital, we track several systems-based practice metrics for residents, including compliance with core health care measures, length of stay, and patient satisfaction.
Residents recognize the need to develop systems-based practice skills, to readily participate in structured curricula designed to enhance such skills, and to provide leadership in organizing and publishing quality improvement initiatives, and upon graduation, they may lament that they did not receive even more vigorous training in these areas.
Although internal medicine residencies continue to improve their training in systems-based practice, our experience suggests that an even greater emphasis on these skills may be warranted.
医疗保健环境的复杂性迅速增加(包括医疗质量和患者安全监测系统),可能导致即将毕业的内科住院医师无法充分准备好应对该系统对他们的要求。作为回应,内科住院医师评审委员会设立了教育创新项目(EIP),以鼓励选定的住院医师培训项目制定新策略和方法,以满足毕业后医学教育不断变化的需求。
作为EIP的一部分,我们的项目创建了一个创新的行政实习项目。这个为期多年的课程提供基于系统的实践培训,包括在内科住院医师培训的3年期间进行的一系列轮转。每次轮转都涉及与非医师人员密切互动,这些人员对使我们的机构成为一个功能健全且团结的单位至关重要。为了评估轮转的潜在影响,我们对高年级住院医师、近期毕业生和教师教育工作者进行了调查。我们与医院的绩效和患者体验部门合作,跟踪住院医师的几个基于系统的实践指标,包括对核心医疗保健措施的遵守情况、住院时间和患者满意度。
住院医师认识到需要培养基于系统的实践技能,愿意参与旨在提高此类技能的结构化课程,并在组织和发表质量改进倡议方面发挥领导作用,而毕业时,他们可能会遗憾自己在这些领域没有接受更有力的培训。
尽管内科住院医师培训项目继续改进其在基于系统的实践方面的培训,但我们的经验表明,可能有必要更加重视这些技能。