Lomis Kimberly, Amiel Jonathan M, Ryan Michael S, Esposito Karin, Green Michael, Stagnaro-Green Alex, Bull Janet, Mejicano George C
K. Lomis is associate dean for undergraduate medical education and professor of surgery, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee. J.M. Amiel is associate dean for curricular affairs and associate professor of psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York. M.S. Ryan is assistant dean for clinical medical education and associate professor of pediatrics, Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia. K. Esposito is associate dean for curriculum and medical education and professor and vice chair of psychiatry and behavioral health, Florida International University Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Miami, Florida. M. Green is professor of medicine and director for student assessment, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut. A. Stagnaro-Green is regional dean and professor of medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, and medical education, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Rockford, Illinois. J. Bull is lead specialist in competency-based learning and assessment, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC. G.C. Mejicano is senior associate dean for education and professor of medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine, Portland, Oregon.
Acad Med. 2017 Jun;92(6):765-770. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001543.
In 2014, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) published a list of 13 Core Entrustable Professional Activities for Entering Residency (Core EPAs) that medical school graduates might be expected to perform, without direct supervision, on the first day of residency. Soon after, the AAMC commissioned a five-year pilot with 10 medical schools across the United States, seeking to implement the Core EPA framework to improve the transition from undergraduate to graduate medical education.In this article, the pilot team presents the organizational structure and early results of collaborative efforts to provide guidance to other institutions planning to implement the Core EPA framework. They describe the aims, timeline, and organization of the pilot as well as findings to date regarding the concepts of entrustment, assessment, curriculum development, and faculty development. On the basis of their experiences over the first two years of the pilot, the authors offer a set of guiding principles for institutions intending to implement the Core EPA framework. They also discuss the impact of the pilot, its limitations, and next steps, as well as how the pilot team is engaging the broader medical education community. They encourage ongoing communication across institutions to capitalize on the expertise of educators to tackle challenges related to the implementation of this novel approach and to generate common national standards for entrustment. The Core EPA pilot aims to better prepare medical school graduates for their professional duties at the beginning of residency with the ultimate goal of improving patient care.
2014年,美国医学院协会(AAMC)公布了一份包含13项进入住院医师培训阶段的核心可托付专业活动(Core EPAs)的清单,医学院毕业生有望在住院医师培训的第一天就能在无直接监督的情况下完成这些活动。此后不久,AAMC委托美国10所医学院开展了一项为期五年的试点项目,旨在实施核心可托付专业活动框架,以改善从本科医学教育到研究生医学教育的过渡。在本文中,试点项目团队介绍了合作努力的组织结构和早期成果,为其他计划实施核心可托付专业活动框架的机构提供指导。他们描述了试点项目的目标、时间表和组织情况,以及迄今为止在托付、评估、课程开发和教师发展等概念方面的研究结果。基于试点项目头两年的经验,作者为有意实施核心可托付专业活动框架的机构提供了一套指导原则。他们还讨论了试点项目的影响、局限性和下一步计划,以及试点项目团队如何与更广泛的医学教育界互动。他们鼓励各机构之间持续沟通,利用教育工作者的专业知识来应对与实施这种新方法相关的挑战,并制定通用的国家托付标准。核心可托付专业活动试点项目旨在让医学院毕业生在住院医师培训初期更好地为履行其专业职责做好准备,最终目标是改善患者护理。