Doty Christopher I, Roppolo Lynn P, Asher Shellie, Seamon Jason P, Bhat Rahul, Taft Stephanie, Graham Autumn, Willis James
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Acad Emerg Med. 2015 Nov;22(11):1351-4. doi: 10.1111/acem.12804. Epub 2015 Oct 16.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) recently has mandated the formation of a clinical competency committee (CCC) to evaluate residents across the newly defined milestone continuum. The ACGME has been nonproscriptive of how these CCCs are to be structured in order to provide flexibility to the programs.
No best practices for the formation of CCCs currently exist. We seek to determine common structures of CCCs recently formed in the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD) member programs and identify unique structures that have been developed.
In this descriptive study, an 18-question survey was distributed via the CORD listserv in the late fall of 2013. Each member program was asked questions about the structure of its CCC. These responses were analyzed with simple descriptive statistics.
A total of 116 of the 160 programs responded, giving a 73% response rate. Of responders, most (71.6%) CCCs are chaired by the associate or assistant program director, while a small number (14.7%) are chaired by a core faculty member. Program directors (PDs) chair 12.1% of CCCs. Most CCCs are attended by the PD (85.3%) and selected core faculty members (78.5%), leaving the remaining committees attended by any core faculty. Voting members of the CCC consist of the residency leadership either with the PD (53.9%) or without the PD (36.5%) as a voting member. CCCs have an average attendance of 7.4 members with a range of three to 15 members. Of respondents, 53.1% of CCCs meet quarterly while 37% meet monthly. The majority of programs (76.4%) report a system to match residents with a faculty mentor or advisor. Of respondents, 36% include the resident's faculty mentor or advisor to discuss a particular resident. Milestone summaries (determination of level for each milestone) are the primary focus of discussion (93.8%), utilizing multiple sources of information.
The substantial variability and diversity found in our CORD survey of CCC structure and function suggest that there are myriad strategies that residency programs can use to match individual program needs and resources to requirements of the ACGME. Identifying a single protocol for CCC structure and development may prove challenging.
毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)最近要求成立临床能力委员会(CCC),以便在新定义的里程碑连续统一体中评估住院医师。ACGME并未对这些CCC的结构做出规定,以便为各项目提供灵活性。
目前不存在关于成立CCC的最佳实践方法。我们试图确定急诊医学住院医师主任委员会(CORD)成员项目中最近成立的CCC的常见结构,并找出已开发的独特结构。
在这项描述性研究中,2013年秋末通过CORD邮件列表分发了一份包含18个问题的调查问卷。每个成员项目都被问及有关其CCC结构的问题。这些回答采用简单描述性统计方法进行分析。
160个项目中共有116个做出回应,回复率为73%。在做出回应的项目中,大多数(71.6%)CCC由副主任或助理项目主任担任主席,而少数(14.7%)由核心教员担任主席。项目主任(PD)担任12.1%的CCC主席。大多数CCC有PD(85.3%)和选定的核心教员(78.5%)参加,其余委员会则由任何核心教员参加。CCC的投票成员包括住院医师领导层,其中有PD作为投票成员的占53.9%,没有PD作为投票成员的占36.5%。CCC的平均出席人数为7.4人,范围为3至15人。在做出回应的项目中,53.1%的CCC每季度开会一次,37%的CCC每月开会一次。大多数项目(76.4%)报告有一个系统,将住院医师与教员导师或顾问进行匹配。在做出回应的项目中,36%的项目会让住院医师的教员导师或顾问参与讨论某个特定住院医师的情况。里程碑总结(确定每个里程碑的水平)是讨论的主要焦点(93.8%),讨论时会利用多种信息来源。
我们在CORD对CCC结构和功能的调查中发现的巨大变异性和多样性表明,住院医师项目可以采用多种策略,以使其个人项目需求和资源符合ACGME的要求。为CCC的结构和发展确定单一方案可能具有挑战性。