Vancouver, British Columbia, Montreal, Quebec, and Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and Ann Arbor, Mich. From the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of British Columbia; the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, McGill University Health Center; the Section of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Michigan; and the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2014 May;133(5):702e-710e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000000082.
North American surgical education is beginning to shift toward competency-based medical education, in which trainees complete their training only when competence has been demonstrated through objective milestones. Pressure is mounting to embrace competency-based medical education because of the perception that it provides more transparent standards and increased public accountability. In response to calls for reform from leading bodies in medical education, competency-based medical education is rapidly becoming the standard in training of physicians.
The authors summarize the rationale behind the recent shift toward competency-based medical education and creation of the milestones framework. With respect to procedural skills, initial efforts will require the field of plastic surgery to overcome three challenges: identifying competencies (principles and procedures), modeling teaching strategies, and developing assessment tools. The authors provide proposals for how these challenges may be addressed and the educational rationale behind each proposal.
A framework for identification of competencies and a stepwise approach toward creation of a principles oriented competency-based medical education curriculum for plastic surgery are presented. An assessment matrix designed to sample resident exposure to core principles and key procedures is proposed, along with suggestions for generating validity evidence for assessment tools.
The ideal curriculum should provide exposure to core principles of plastic surgery while demonstrating competence through performance of index procedures that are most likely to benefit graduating residents when entering independent practice and span all domains of plastic surgery. The authors advocate that exploring the role and potential benefits of competency-based medical education in plastic surgery residency training is timely.
北美外科学术教育开始转向以能力为基础的医学教育,在此模式下,只有当学员通过客观的里程碑式考核证明具备相应能力后,方可结束培训。人们普遍认为,以能力为基础的医学教育可以提供更透明的标准和更高的公众问责制,因此这种教育模式的压力与日俱增。为响应医学教育领域主要机构提出的改革要求,以能力为基础的医学教育正在迅速成为医生培训的标准。
作者总结了最近转向以能力为基础的医学教育和里程碑式框架创建背后的基本原理。在手术技能方面,初步需要整形外科领域克服三个挑战:确定能力(原则和程序)、建立教学策略模型以及开发评估工具。作者就如何应对这些挑战以及每项建议背后的教育原理提出了建议。
作者提出了一个确定能力的框架,以及一个逐步创建以整形外科原则为导向的能力为基础的医学教育课程的方法。作者还提出了一个评估矩阵,旨在抽样评估住院医师对核心原则和关键程序的接触情况,并就评估工具的有效性证据生成提出了建议。
理想的课程应提供接触整形外科核心原则的机会,同时通过执行最有可能使即将毕业的住院医师在独立行医时受益的指标性手术来展示能力,这些手术涵盖了整形外科的所有领域。作者主张,探讨以能力为基础的医学教育在整形外科住院医师培训中的作用和潜在益处是及时的。